Your data & database Every onvibe app comes with its own real database — automatically, with nothing to set up. That's what lets your app *remember* things between visits: the RSVPs people submitted, the items on a list, the posts in a guestbook. What this means for you - You don't create or configure a database. It's there from the moment your app exists. - When you ask for an app that "saves", "remembers", "keeps a list of", or "tracks" something, your AI uses this database behind the scenes. - Your data persists. Updating your app's design or features does not erase what's stored. What to ask for Just describe what should be remembered, in plain words: - *"Save each sign-up with their name, email, and the date they joined."* - *"Keep a running list of expenses with amount, category, and a note."* - *"Remember which items are checked off so they stay checked when I reload."* Seeing and editing your data You can ask your AI about the stored data directly: - *"How many people have signed up so far?"* - *"Show me the last 10 messages."* - *"Delete the test entries I added earlier."* Your AI can read and change the data for you — you don't need to know any database language. Changing what gets stored If you later want to store something new (say, add a phone number to each sign-up), just ask. Your AI will evolve the structure without throwing away the data already there. This is done carefully so the live app keeps working during the change. > *"Add an optional 'company' field to the sign-up form and store it too."* Good to know - Each project has its own separate database — apps don't share data with each other. - There's a generous storage allowance per project; see Limits & good to know. - For files and images specifically (not text data), see Files & images.