\section{Config classes overview}\label{wxconfigoverview} Classes: \helpref{wxConfig}{wxconfigbase} This overview briefly describes what the config classes are and what are the for. All the details about how to use them may be found in the description of the \helpref{wxConfigBase}{wxconfigbase} class and the documentation of the file, registry and INI file based implementations mentions all the features/limitations specific to each one of these versions. The config classes provide a way to store some application configuration information. They were especially designed for this usage and, although may probably be used for many other things as well, should be limited to it. It means that this information should be: \begin{itemize} \item{1.} Typed, i.e. strings or numbers for the moment. You can not store binary data, for example. \item{2.} Small. For instance, it is not recommended to use the Windows registry for amounts of data more than a couple of kilobytes. \item{3.} Not performance critical, neither from speed nor from memory consumption point of view. \end{itemize} On the other hand, the provided features make them very useful for storing all kind of small to medioum volumes of hierarchically organized heterogenous data. In short, this is a place where you can conveniently stuff all your data (numbers and strings) organizing it in a tree where you use the filesystem-like paths to specify the location of a piece of data. In particular, these classes were designed to be as easy to use as possible. From another point of view, they provide an interface which hides the differences between the Windows registry and the standard Unix text format configuration files. Other (future) implementations of wxConfigBase might also understand GTK ressource files or their analogues on the KDE side. In any case, each implementation of wxConfigBase does its best (although due to the limitations of the underlying physical storage as in the case of wxIniConfigs it may not implement 100\% of the base class functionality) to make the data look the same way everywhere. So you have the groups of entries and the entries themselves. Each entry contains either a string or a number (or a boolean value... support for other types of data such as dates or timestamps is planned) and is identified by the full path to it: something like /MyApp/UserPreferences/Colors/Foreground. The previous elements in the path are the group names, each name may contain an arbitrary number of entries and subgroups. The path components are {\bf always} separated with a slash, even though some implementations use the backslash internally. The further details (including how to read/write these entries) may be found in \helpref{wxConfigBase}{wxconfigbase} documentation.