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1 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
2 | // Name: config.h | |
3 | // Purpose: topic overview | |
4 | // Author: wxWidgets team | |
5 | // RCS-ID: $Id$ | |
6 | // Licence: wxWindows license | |
7 | ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// | |
8 | ||
9 | /** | |
10 | ||
11 | @page overview_config wxConfig Overview | |
12 | ||
13 | Classes: wxConfigBase | |
14 | ||
15 | This overview briefly describes what the config classes are and what they are | |
16 | for. All the details about how to use them may be found in the description of | |
17 | the wxConfigBase class and the documentation of the file, registry and INI file | |
18 | based implementations mentions all the features/limitations specific to each | |
19 | one of these versions. | |
20 | ||
21 | The config classes provide a way to store some application configuration | |
22 | information. They were especially designed for this usage and, although may | |
23 | probably be used for many other things as well, should be limited to it. It | |
24 | means that this information should be: | |
25 | ||
26 | @li Typed, i.e. strings or numbers for the moment. You can not store binary | |
27 | data, for example. | |
28 | @li Small. For instance, it is not recommended to use the Windows registry for | |
29 | amounts of data more than a couple of kilobytes. | |
30 | @li Not performance critical, neither from speed nor from a memory consumption | |
31 | point of view. | |
32 | ||
33 | On the other hand, the features provided make them very useful for storing all | |
34 | kinds of small to medium volumes of hierarchically-organized, heterogeneous | |
35 | data. In short, this is a place where you can conveniently stuff all your data | |
36 | (numbers and strings) organizing it in a tree where you use the filesystem-like | |
37 | paths to specify the location of a piece of data. In particular, these classes | |
38 | were designed to be as easy to use as possible. | |
39 | ||
40 | From another point of view, they provide an interface which hides the | |
41 | differences between the Windows registry and the standard Unix text format | |
42 | configuration files. Other (future) implementations of wxConfigBase might also | |
43 | understand GTK resource files or their analogues on the KDE side. | |
44 | ||
45 | In any case, each implementation of wxConfigBase does its best to make the data | |
46 | look the same way everywhere. Due to limitations of the underlying physical | |
47 | storage, it may not implement 100% of the base class functionality. | |
48 | ||
49 | There are groups of entries and the entries themselves. Each entry contains | |
50 | either a string or a number (or a boolean value; support for other types of | |
51 | data such as dates or timestamps is planned) and is identified by the full path | |
52 | to it: something like @c /MyApp/UserPreferences/Colors/Foreground. | |
53 | ||
54 | The previous elements in the path are the group names, and each name may | |
55 | contain an arbitrary number of entries and subgroups. | |
56 | ||
57 | The path components are @e always separated with a slash, even though some | |
58 | implementations use the backslash internally. Further details (including how to | |
59 | read/write these entries) may be found in the documentation for wxConfigBase. | |
60 | ||
61 | */ | |
62 |