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author | Jörg Frings-Fürst <debian@jff-webhosting.net> | 2015-02-04 14:09:54 +0100 |
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committer | Jörg Frings-Fürst <debian@jff-webhosting.net> | 2015-02-04 14:09:54 +0100 |
commit | bd82d030011cd8b9655e5ded6b6df9343b42a6bd (patch) | |
tree | de82d886dfea0cb7dbb6e80436218a25cb211bc3 /README.txt |
Imported Upstream version 3.22upstream/3.22
Diffstat (limited to 'README.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | README.txt | 77 |
1 files changed, 77 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/README.txt b/README.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2b0f729 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.txt @@ -0,0 +1,77 @@ + +libHX is a C library (with some C++ bindings available) that provides data +structures and functions commonly needed, such as maps, deques, linked lists, +string formatting and autoresizing, option and config file parsing, type +checking casts and more. + +libHX aids in quickly writing up C and C++ data processing programs, by +consolidating tasks that often happen to be open-coded, such as (simple) config +file reading, option parsing, directory traversal, and others, into a library. +The focus is on reducing the amount of time (and secondarily, the amount of +code) a developer has to spend for otherwise implementing such. + + +Components (by all means not all) + + • Documentation (see doc/libHX_Documentation.pdf) + + • maps/sets (HXmap_*) + + Originally created to provide a data structure like Perl's associative + arrays. Multiple models and underlying storage data structures are + available (unordered hash-based map, ordered rbtree). + + • linked lists (HXdeque_*, HXlist_*, HXclist_*) + + Doubly-linked lists are suitable for both providing stack and queue + functionality. Different implementations are available for use, depending + on situation. + + • directory handling (HXdir_*) + + HXdir provides for opendir-readdir-closedir semantics. Windows uses a + different kind, so it had to be naturally covered up. On the other hand, + Solaris's readdir() implementation is nasty in terms of memory management. + HXdir covers up these discrepancies and provides a sane Linux-style + readdir. + + Convenience functions mkdir (create all missing parents), rrmdir (rm -Rf) + are also available. + + • string formatter with placeholders (HXformat_*) + + HXformat is something in the direction of printf(), but the argument list + is not implemented by means of varargs, so is flexible even beyond compile + time. You can change the format string — in fact, just let the user + configuration provide it — without having to worry about argument + evaluation problems. Positional and optional arguments are simply freely + choosable. + + • memory containers, auto-sizing string ops (HXmc_*) + + At the cost of slightly increased number memory allocations as you work + with the buffers, the hmc collection of functions provide scripting-level + semantics for strings. Appending to a string is simply hmc_strcat(&s, + "123") [cf. $s .= "123"], without having to worry about overflowing a + buffer. + + • option parsing (HXoption_*) + + Put blunt, libpopt failed to do some elementary things and there was no + maintainer to fix it. Well, it's packaged with rpm which already diverged + in all distros. + HXoption is table- and callback-based, much like popt. + + • shellconfig parser (HXshconfig_*) + + Parsers shconfig files. Their format is a subset of shell code. Files in / + etc/sysconfig are commonly shconfig-style. + + • common string operations + + basename, chomp, dirname, getl(ine), split, strlower/-upper, str*trim, + strsep, strsep2, etc. + +This page was last modified: 2011-01-15 16:41 UTC libHX.sf.net + +# Generated using `w3m -dump libhx.sf.net` and slightly editing it. |