Currently there are two versions of WinUI - version 2.0 and WinUI 3.0. Microsoft describes WinUI as: Windows UI Library: the latest Windows 10 native controls and Fluent styles for your applications. You can think of it as an API that was extracted from UWP so it is easier to update it. But not everyone can afford the luxury of updating to the latest Windows version, so Microsoft decided that it would be better if the UI library is decoupled from Windows. UWP is distributed as part of Windows, so newer versions included fixes, improvements and new UI controls. By doing that you can write your application once and deploy it on all Windows 10 supported devices like PC, tablets, HoloLens, etc. So UWP has APIs that you as developer use to target all devices that support Windows 10. The UWP core APIs are the same on all Windows devices. Microsoft describes it by stating: Windows 10 introduces the Universal Windows Platform (UWP), which provides a common app platform on every device that runs Windows 10. UWP stands for Universal Windows Platform.
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