* This section describes compile tokens which affect USB driver stack as a whole in the LUFA library.\r
*\r
* <b>USE_RAM_DESCRIPTORS</b> - ( \ref Group_Descriptors ) \n\r
- * Define this token to indicate to the USB driver that device descriptors are stored in RAM, rather than the default of\r
- * the AVR's flash. RAM descriptors may be desirable in applications where speed or minimizing flash usage is more important\r
- * than RAM usage, or applications where the descriptors need to be modified at runtime.\r
+ * Define this token to indicate to the USB driver that all device descriptors are stored in RAM, rather than being located in any one\r
+ * of the AVR's memory spaces. RAM descriptors may be desirable in applications where the descriptors need to be modified at runtime.\r
+ *\r
+ * <b>USE_FLASH_DESCRIPTORS</b> - ( \ref Group_Descriptors ) \n\r
+ * Similar to USE_RAM_DESCRIPTORS, but all descriptors are stored in the AVR's FLASH memory rather than RAM.\r
*\r
* <b>USE_EEPROM_DESCRIPTORS</b> - ( \ref Group_Descriptors ) \n\r
- * Similar to USE_RAM_DESCRIPTORS, but descriptors are stored in the AVR's EEPROM memory rather than RAM.\r
+ * Similar to USE_RAM_DESCRIPTORS, but all descriptors are stored in the AVR's EEPROM memory rather than RAM.\r
*\r
* <b>USE_NONSTANDARD_DESCRIPTOR_NAMES</b> - ( \ref Group_Descriptors ) \n\r
* The USB 2.0 standard gives some rather obscure names for the elements in the standard descriptor types (device, configuration,\r
* defined to a non-zero value instead to give the size in bytes of the control endpoint, to reduce the size of the compiled\r
* binary.\r
*\r
- * <b>USE_SINGLE_DEVICE_CONFIGURATION</b> - ( \ref Group_Device ) \n\r
+ * <b>TOTAL_NUM_CONFIGURATIONS</b> - ( \ref Group_Device ) \n\r
* By default, the library determines the number of configurations a USB device supports by reading the device descriptor. This reduces\r
* the amount of configuration required to set up the library, and allows the value to change dynamically (if descriptors are stored in\r
- * EEPROM or RAM rather than flash memory) and reduces code maintenance. However, many USB device projects use only a single configuration.\r
- * Defining this token enables single-configuration mode, reducing the compiled size of the binary at the expense of flexibility.\r
+ * EEPROM or RAM rather than flash memory) and reduces code maintenance. However, this value may be fixed via this token in the project\r
+ * makefile to reduce the compiled size of the binary at the expense of flexibility.\r
*\r
* <b>CONTROL_ONLY_DEVICE</b> \n\r
* In some limited USB device applications, there are no device endpoints other than the control endpoint; i.e. all device communication\r