In section "dependency" use "*" in processorArchitecture instead of specifying the concrete architecture such as "amd64" or "x86". This allows to have just one manifest for all architectures instead of having them for all supported architectures individually differing in just processorArchitecture.
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Microsoft Windows XP Support from wxWidgets
Windows XP introduces the themes (called "visual styles" in the Microsoft documentation) in Windows world. As wxWidgets uses the standard Windows controls for most of its classes, it can take advantage of it without (almost) any effort from your part. The only thing you need to do if you want your program to honour the visual style setting of Windows XP is to add the manifest file to your program (this is not at all specific to wxWidgets programs but is required for all Windows applications).
wxWidgets now includes manifest resources in wx.rc, so it should be enough to include "wx/msw/wx.rc" in your application's resource file and you get XP look automatically. Notice that MSVC 2005 and later embed manifest in the executables it produces and wxWidgets doesn't use its own manifest when using this compiler. And if you don't want to use wxWidgets manifest with another compiler you may define wxUSE_NO_MANIFEST as 1 prior to including wx/msw/wx.rc.
Finally, if all else fails you may always use a manifest manually. For this you need to create your own manifest file and put it in a file called "yourapp.exe.manifest" in the same directory where "yourapp.exe" resides. Alternatively, you can include the manifest in your applications resource section. Please see the MSDN documentation at
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/bb773175
for more details.
Here is the example manifest which you can put into controls.exe.manifest file to test theme support using the controls sample:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<assembly xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1" manifestVersion="1.0">
<assemblyIdentity
version="0.64.1.0"
processorArchitecture="x86"
name="Controls"
type="win32"
/>
<description>Controls: wxWidgets sample application</description>
<dependency>
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity
type="win32"
name="Microsoft.Windows.Common-Controls"
version="6.0.0.0"
processorArchitecture="*"
publicKeyToken="6595b64144ccf1df"
language="*"
/>
</dependentAssembly>
</dependency>
</assembly>