Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 11th Jan 2009 10:54 UTC, submitted by Hiev
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Member since:
2007-03-07
Not true. The Java Preferences API in Windows uses the Windows registry as its default backing store. So using the Java Preferences API, you can read and write to the Windows registry just fine. No JNI required.
Edited 2009-01-13 13:48 UTC