# xtandard xtandard -- Xolatile-style "header-only" library for commonly used functions. - This library was written mainly for my own projects, but you can repurpose it for your own needs... - Intended usage is writing simple programs, which can fit it one source file, often only in 'main' function. - I'm not scared of using global variables, but there's not many of them, also rare "C-style" namespaces. Compile: ```bash $ sh compile.sh ``` Install: ```bash $ sudo sh install.sh ``` If you want to make a project that's separated in more files, you can link with '.o' or include '.c' instead of '.h' in main file. If your project consists of only 1 file, which is the intent behind this library, just include '.c' and that's it. I'm a lazy person, and I do what every lazy person does, for good reference look at Raylib, which is quite decent library. ```c void in (void * data, int size); void out (void * data, int size); void log_in (int type, int flag, char * data); void log_out (char * name); void echo (char * data); void dump (char * name, char * data); void echo_byte (int byte); void fatal_failure (int condition, char * message); void limit (int * value, int minimum, int maximum); void * allocate (int size); void * reallocate (void * data, int size); void * deallocate (void * data); void * record (void); int file_open (char * name, int mode); ... void file_export (char * name, void * data); void file_list_import (char * name); ... void file_list_delete (void); int character_is_uppercase (char character); ... int character_is_hexadecimal (char character); int character_compare_array (char character, char * character_array); int character_count (char * string, char this, int from, int to, char stop); int string_length (char * string); ... char * string_realign (char * string, int amount, char character); void memory_delete (void * memory, int length); int memory_compare (void * memory, void * source, int length); void memory_copy (void * memory, void * source, int length); void terminal_clear (void); void terminal_colour (int colour, int effect); void terminal_cancel (void); void terminal_show_cursor (int show); int encode_byte (char * byte); char * decode_byte (int byte); ``` There's more, but reading the actual source code is better than opening this in your internet browser.