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- windows - MFC Support in Visual Studio - Stack Overflow
MFC is still officially maintained and supported I don't think it will disappear anytime soon and it will also continue to work during a very long time since it's still used by big software (including Microsoft's ones) However, officially supported doesn't mean much, no one from Microsoft will help you (unless you pay big support bucks) plus it's open source It's more that the technology
- C++ MSB8041 Error: MFC libraries are required for this project
I installed every available MFC option, which is not out of support, restarted Visual Studio 2022, and I still get this error MFC libraries are required for this project
- visual studio 2017 - MFC development in vs2017 - Stack Overflow
When I installed vs2017, I did select Windows development with C++ option After installation, however, I don't see the MFC has been added Sure enough, I get errors when I compile my application,
- c++ - Resizing Controls in MFC - Stack Overflow
I am writing a program which has two panes (via CSplitter), however I am having problems figuring out out to resize the controls in each frame For simplicity, can someone tell me how I would do it
- visual c++ - Is There Still A Case For MFC - Stack Overflow
MFC was a good option 10 years ago It is still a good wrapper over Win32 API but unfortunately obsolete Qt is a better option with one big advantage - it is platform-independent With MFC you're doomed to Windows
- winapi - How do I decide whether to use ATL, MFC, Win32 or CLR for a . . .
MFC builds upon Win32 to provide you an object-oriented way of building your application It's not a replacement for Win32, but rather an enhancement - it does a lot of the hard work for you System Windows Forms (which is what I assume you meant by CLR) is completely different but has large similarities to MFC from its basic structure
- MFC C++ CButton mouse hover event - Stack Overflow
Subclassing is an involved topic, but MFC provides powerful tools that make it much more convenient to employ 2 The Tools Subclassing controls with MFC requires the following steps: Define a class deriving from the respective MFC control wrapper 3 Instantiate an object of this class by declaring a class member in its parent dialog
- c++ - Fix side-by-side configuration error in MFC application w o . . .
Here's the screenshot from "Dependency Walker": I obtained Microsoft's MFC redistributable files mfc90u dll and msvcr90 dll and placed them into the same folder as my TestEnumProcs exe, but when I try to run it on one of my older computers I get this error: The application has failed to start because its side-by-side configuration is incorrect
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