various c++ utility classes
- iostreams based hexdumper utility
- string formatter using variadic templates instead of varargs, making use of iostreams for formatting.
- utf-X string converter.
- c++17 required.
- a argc/argv argument parsing library:
argparse.h
arrayview.h
- provide an interface similar to std::stringview, or boost::span- `asn1parser: decodes BER encoded data
- datapacking: big/little endian data extraction
- fhandle: c++ wrapper for a POSIX file handle.
- fslibrary: enumerates files recursively.
- mmem: memory mapped files.
- stringconvert: utf-N conversion tools.
- stringlibrary: type independent string functions.
- xmlparser: idea based on the python html.parser module.
Several methods of including this project:
- include this project using cmake
add\_subdirectory
- add the Findcpputils.cmake to your
CMAKE\_MODULE\_PATH
, and then usefind\_package(cpputils)
- add
-I cpputils/include
to your compiler commandline.
How to use the include files:
#include <cpputils/formatter.h>
int main(...)
{
print("%s\n", std::string("test"));
}
Using iostream to configure hexdump output:
std::cout << Hex::hexstring << Hex::dumper(data, size) << "\n";
std::cout << Hex::offset(0x12000) << Hex::right << Hex::dumper(data, size) << "\n";
A more detailed description can be found in this blog post
printf like formatting using a combination of variadic templates and iostreams.
Example:
std::cout << stringformat("%d %s %d", 1LL, std::string("test"), size_t(3));
You can stringify custom types by defining a suitable operator<<(os, customtype)
.
Compared to alternatives like fmtlib, boost::format, this implementation creates very small binaries. Performance is below that of fmtlib, but well about boost::format.
The code is centered around the StringFormatter
class. Several functions use this
to provide formatting:
std::string stringformat(const char *fmt, ...)
- print to a stl string
QString qstringformat(const char *fmt, ...)
- print to a QT string
fprint(FILE *out, const char*fmt, ...)
- print to a file
print(const char*fmt, ...)
- print to stdout
debug(const char*fmt, ...)
- print to windows debug log
Makefile.bench builds several small programs for comparing my formatter to several other similar libraries.
Convert C or C++ strings to C++ strings, between any of UTF-8, UTF-16, UTF-32, depending on the size of the character type.
Example:
auto utf8str = string::convert<char>(L"test");
auto utf16str = string::convert<uint16_t>(L"test");
The first line converts a wchar_t string, which is either utf-16 or utf-32 encoded depending on the compiler, to a utf-8 string, the second line converts to utf-16.
Class for conveniently parsing commandline arguments.
This example will parse: cmd -apple -a 1234 first second -
for (auto& arg : ArgParser(argc, argv))
switch (arg.option())
{
case 'a': if (arg.match("-apple")) {
/*...*/
}
else {
a_arg = arg.getint();
}
break;
case '-': if (arg.match("--verbose"))
verbosity = 1;
break;
case 'v': verbosity = arg.count();
break;
case 0: usestdin = true;
break;
case -1: switch(n++)
{
case 0: first = arg.getstr(); break;
case 1: second = arg.getstr(); break;
}
}
Several utility functions for handling NUL terminated char and wchar strings, and std::strings:
- stringcopy, stringlength, stringcompare, stringicompare, stringsplitter, (lr)strip
Parsing integers from strings:
- parseunsigned, parsesigned
Classes for packing and unpacking fixed width numeric data, in either little or big-endian format.
Exeption safe wrapper for posix filehandles.
class for using mem-mapped files.
A Recursive file iterator, which can be used from a ranged-for-loop.
Provides several methods of accessing items in an asn.1 BER encoded object.
asn1tlv
is an object which decodes the Type + Length fields, and Provides the 'range' where the Data is located.enumtlvs
iterates over all BER objects found in the given range.traverse
extracts a specific part from a BER encoded object.
A Makefile is provided for building the unittests. These can be build 'normally', and also with options for code coverage testing.
several targets exist:
all
, the old method of building the testscmake
, using cmake to resolve dependenciesvc
, for building this on windows platforms with cmake + visualc++
- add support for hexdumping data from streams.
- string alignment / width does not work correctly for unicode characters > 0x80.
"% d"
: space-for-positive is not supported."%\*d"
: width from argument list is not supported."%+08d"
produces the wrong result: the sign will be after the padding, instead of in front."%.8s"
string truncation does not work.- add support for different alphabets in base32/base64.
- add linereader which takes either a filehandle, or a range
- add read() which allocates it's return buffer.
(C) 2016-2023 Willem Hengeveld [email protected]