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The data values or settings are like the leaves and the branches are the keys or indexes to those settings. You can think of the registry as a large tree with many branches and leaves. When you first install Windows it already included many settings that you might need: about 150,000 in Windows XP, close to 380,000 in Vista, and nearly 450,000 in Windows 7 (all 32-bit versions). Just remember that there are lots of these entries. It mainly stores settings for anything Windows needs to know about: startup settings, program settings, installed components, network connections including the Internet, printer settings, mobile phone and tablet connections, and many other details you're probably not interested in. The registry is a database or a large index of information that is needed for Windows to run. None of the products properly explain what they are suggesting should be removed and none clearly indicate the risks of such cleaning. Although none of the registry cleaners I recommend here have caused me a problem I have not elected to have an Editor's Choice in this category because I consider that all the registry cleaners fail to provide clear guidance to make registry cleaning a well-informed choice. This ever-present risk of problems is why the "Best Registry Cleaner" is the one that causes the fewest problems, rather than the one that finds the greatest number of registry issues.
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