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I am familiar with WinForms and MFC which are both built on top of the WIN32 API. So really in either of those two, when you call for a Button in the background that framework calls multiple API functions to get the work done.

So my question is, do all other libraries interact with windows via the WIN32 API?

The only other one I can think of is WPF (Maybe Qt? Idk what Qt is at all), I am not familiar with anything else.

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The Windows API is the public programming interface for Windows, and any (desktop) application running on Windows will eventually call into the Windows API to get things done. This is accomplished through different levels of abstraction:

  • An application written in C accessing the Windows API, without CRT support will directly use the services provided through the Windows API.
  • An application written in C or C++ using the CRT will use a mix of directly calling into the Windows API and using the CRT's abstraction. For example, memory allocations using malloc or new will be mapped to Windows API calls by the CRT.
  • Applications using a C++ framework like MFC, Qt, or WTL can still call the Windows API directly, but will usually use the services provided by the framework. The services provided by the framework will eventually call into the Windows API.
  • .NET applications compiled to Common Intermediate Language (CIL) will be compiled to native code by the Common Language Runtime (CLR). The services provided by the CLR are implemented on top of the Windows API.
  • Scripting languages like VBScript are executed by an execution environment (e.g. the Windows Scripting Host for VBScript). This execution environment is implemented on top of the Windows API as well.

The only exception I could think of is WinRT. Some parts of WinRT use existing Windows services by means of the Windows API. Other parts are completely new from top to bottom, and directly interact with the kernel.

There is also the possibility to sidestep the Windows API and directly interact with the kernel through the Native API. This, however, is not publicly documented, and not an official programming interface.

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    There's also the Subsystem for UNIX-based Applications but this is little used and is deprecated as of Windows 8. Aug 11, 2014 at 23:08
  • @Harry: That's true. SFU/SUA is another subsystem next to the Win32, POSIX, or OS/2 subsystems. I think when the OP said interact with Windows they were referring to the Win32 subsystem. Still, for completeness, the Architecture of Windows NT has an illustration that shows, where Environment Subsystems are implemented. Aug 12, 2014 at 0:19
  • What are the analogs for linux based OS? // I might make an edit to the question and add this. // By interact I meant the means by which it gets windows to do something for it; draw on the screen, "touch" some hardware, etc. Aug 12, 2014 at 14:10
  • @AnotherUser: While most Linux distributions include a graphical user environment, this is not strictly part of the OS. User interface toolkits are implemented on top of one of several window managers. However, there is no official GUI programming interface, and as such library code can take numerous routes to interact with the kernel. The architecture is roughly explained at Linux. Aug 12, 2014 at 14:19
  • @IInspectable I love WinAPI. Why oh why, is Microsoft so frenetic about developing so many new technologies on top of it WinRT/UWP wasting thousands of manhours and money and abandoning a perfectly viable and working API instead of just revamping/extending it I WILL NEVER UNDERSTAND. It is simply beyond my humble capability to reason.
    – KeyC0de
    Jan 6, 2021 at 12:43

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