Process Interoperability
You can run Win32-based applications on 64-bit Windows using an emulation layer. Windows 10 on ARM includes an x86-on-ARM64 emulation layer. For more information, see Running 32-bit Applications.
On 64-bit Windows, a 64-bit process cannot load a 32-bit dynamic-link library (DLL). Additionally, a 32-bit process cannot load a 64-bit DLL. However, 64-bit Windows supports remote procedure calls (RPC) between 64-bit and 32-bit processes (both on the same computer and across computers). On 64-bit Windows, an out-of-process 32-bit COM server can communicate with a 64-bit client, and an out-of-process 64-bit COM server can communicate with a 32-bit client. Therefore, if you have a 32-bit DLL that is not COM-aware, you can wrap it in an out-of-process COM server and use COM to marshal calls to and from a 64-bit process.
In-process servers are currently registered using the InprocServer registry entry. On 64-bit Windows, 64- and 32-bit in-process servers should use the InprocServer32 entry.
To port handles, which by their nature are local to the computer and would never be used across the 32-bit to 64-bit boundary, use the HANDLE_PTR type instead of the INT_PTR or DWORD_PTR type. This includes porting RPC interfaces passing such handles as DWORD values. The 64-bit HANDLE_PTR is 64 bits on the wire (not truncated) and thus does not need mapping. (The 32-bit HANDLE_PTR is 32 bits on the wire.)
For more information, see Designing 64-bit-Compatible Interfaces.