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The following code example uses the CurrentUser key to create a writable instance of the RegistryKey class corresponding to the Software key. The CreateSubKey method is then used to create a new key and add to key/value pairs.
Example
Code
// registry_write.cpp
// compile with: /clr
using namespace System;
using namespace Microsoft::Win32;
int main()
{
// The second OpenSubKey argument indicates that
// the subkey should be writable.
RegistryKey^ rk;
rk = Registry::CurrentUser->OpenSubKey("Software", true);
if (!rk)
{
Console::WriteLine("Failed to open CurrentUser/Software key");
return -1;
}
RegistryKey^ nk = rk->CreateSubKey("NewRegKey");
if (!nk)
{
Console::WriteLine("Failed to create 'NewRegKey'");
return -1;
}
String^ newValue = "NewValue";
try
{
nk->SetValue("NewKey", newValue);
nk->SetValue("NewKey2", 44);
}
catch (Exception^)
{
Console::WriteLine("Failed to set new values in 'NewRegKey'");
return -1;
}
Console::WriteLine("New key created.");
Console::Write("Use REGEDIT.EXE to verify ");
Console::WriteLine("'CURRENTUSER/Software/NewRegKey'\n");
return 0;
}
Remarks
You can use the .NET Framework to access the registry with the Registry and RegistryKey classes, which are both defined in the Microsoft.Win32 namespace. The Registry class is a container for static instances of the RegistryKey class. Each instance represents a root registry node. The instances are ClassesRoot, CurrentConfig, CurrentUser, LocalMachine, and Users.
See Also
Concepts
How to: Read Data from the Windows Registry (C++/CLI)