Non-ASCII characters will be escaped to hex or octal. C escape sequences are used for the predefined sequences like '\b'. The output is separated into lines of approximately even length and does not exceed the chosen line length. An example of a conversion is usage.txt being turned into usage.inc. You can feed it binary or text files.
You can copy/paste the output as string contents into your C source or #include
the output like so:
static char data[] =
#include "data.inc"
;
#define s_data ( sizeof( data) - 1)
C will append a '\0' character to strings! So the actual data length is
sizeof( data) - 1
.
See usage.txt for options.
Let's use mulle-c-string-escape to create a C string representation of
itself into a file "x.inc". We use cmake
here, instead of
mulle-sde craft --release
, to ease the developer's fear of the unknown:
mkdir -p kitchen/Release
cmake -B kitchen/Release -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
cmake --build kitchen/Release --config Release
./kitchen/Release/mulle-c-string-escape \
./kitchen/Release/mulle-c-string-escape \
x.inc
To verify that this has actually worked:
cat <<EOF > x.c
#include <stdio.h>
static char text[] = "" // useful in case x.inc can be empty
#include "x.inc"
;
int main( int argc, char *argv[])
{
FILE *fp;
fp = fopen( "verify.exe", "wb");
fwrite( text, sizeof( text) - 1, 1, fp); // -1 because C appends a \0
return( fclose( fp));
}
EOF
cc -o x x.c
./x
diff verify.exe ./kitchen/Release/mulle-c-string-escape
This is a mulle-sde project.
It comes with its own virtual environment and list of dependencies. To fetch and build everything say:
mulle-sde craft
To the memory of Oliver "General" Mondry ([email protected])
Nat! for Mulle kybernetiK.