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Home/ Questions/Q 869329
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T10:17:22+00:00 2026-05-15T10:17:22+00:00

I am very interested in how modern Windows software is written in C++ nowadays.

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I am very interested in how modern Windows software is written in C++ nowadays. I asked my friend who had worked on Windows software and he told that last things he worked with were MFC and then WTL. He said that MFC is no longer anything modern but WTL is still used but he didn’t know much more. He also said that WTL wasn’t that modern and before that he programmed in pure Windows API.

How does one write software for Windows Vista or Windows 7? Do you still use WTL? What about MFC and pure Windows API? Or are there other libraries now?

I don’t know much about it, but have C# or other .NET languages replaced C++ in writing modern Windows software?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T10:17:22+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 10:17 am

    From what I’ve seen over the past several years:

    • WTL is on a lifeline. Abandoned by Microsoft, picked up by fans and there were several very dedicated followers. Very clean, but the learning curve is steep and the fan base dwindling. The Yahoo group is not very active. I can’t recommend it.

    • MFC got another lease on life when MSFT released the feature pack. Rather extensive and a bit un-MFC-ish, it has strong support for skinning, docking layouts and ribbons. I thought it was going to be wildly popular but never did see a lot of devs jumping on it. MSDN forum questions have been sparse. If you have an existing MFC codebase then definitely take a look. Another MFC refresh for VS2010 with Win7 features added, it does stay the company’s base UI solution.

    • wxWidgets is still around. No personal experience, but Lord, the few practitioners I’ve heard from are bitching up a storm. Real bitter stuff too.

    • Qt has been around for quite a while but picked up stream considerably, especially in the last year. Whomever uses it really likes it. It is moving beyond the confines of a UI class library as well, their users are looking actively for solutions to common programming tasks that start with the letter Q. That’s a powerful vote of confidence.

    But if you are on a Microsoft stack, none of these class libraries is where the real UI development is at. WPF is the elephant in the room, it’s capabilities are a hundred miles beyond what’s listed above. Its ability to break device and paradigm boundaries are powerful, writing code that runs on a desktop as well as a web browser as well as a phone is hard to beat. But C++ is not part of that.

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