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The Windows Installer SDK contains the most complete and current descriptions of the application programming interface (API) and the elements of the Installer database. It is the primary source of developer reference material for the Windows Installer.
The following supplemental information sources may also be helpful to software developers and IT professionals who use the Windows Installer.
You can check the Windows Developer Center for information about using Windows Installer when building applications for Windows.
You can ask community members about the Windows Installer:
Archive of Windows Installer Chats
Transcripts of previous chats about the Windows Installer are archived for you to read at any time.
You can search the Microsoft Q&A site for articles and newsgroups about the Windows Installer:
You can read white papers that describe the Windows Installer:
You can read about Windows Installer online:
Note
You need to download and install the Microsoft Windows Software Development Kit (SDK) to obtain the development tools described in the Windows Installer Development Tools section of the documentation.
Orca is a GUI .msi file editor that is provided with the Windows Installer SDK. It provides full access to the Windows Installer database tables.
A set of Help files are provided with Orca. To obtain the orca.exe and Orca documentation you must download and install the Windows Installer SDK, which is provided as an Orca.msi file. After you install the Microsoft Windows Software Development Kit (SDK), double click the Orca.msi file to install Orca.
Note
It is not possible to download Orca separately.
Although Orca provides access to all features of the Windows Installer, it is not intended to replace a fully featured package-authoring environment. In many cases, it is easier to create a Windows Installer installation for an application by using one of the commercial package-creation tools available from independent software vendors.
You can contact an independent software vendor about tools to create a Windows Installer package for an application. These tools can provide a package authoring environment that may be easier to use than the tools provided in the Windows Installer SDK.
You can visit non-Microsoft Web sites that provide useful information about the Windows Installer. The following list identifies some of those sites:
Windows Installer information for developers.
Windows Installer information for IT professionals.
Windows Installer XML (WiX) project on Sourceforge.net.
Events
May 19, 6 PM - May 23, 12 AM
Calling all developers, creators, and AI innovators to join us in Seattle @Microsoft Build May 19-22.
Register today