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I'm just wondering if anyone has already created a tool that will take a given JSON string and write the code for an identical struct in C along with the parser code specific to that struct.
I'm about to do this myself using JSON-C, but I thought I'd ask first.
I think protobuf is my best bet. A guy on the NodeJS list led me on to this.
protobuf-c
node-protobuf
protobuf-js
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I need to figure out the inner workings of the function pcap_dump (https://linux.die.net/man/3/pcap_dump) however I cannot seem to find the source code for it anywhere.
Does anyone know where I can find this (and possibly the starting line of the function's code, in case I have just missed it in the correct file)? Thanks!
Looks like it's from LIBPCAP library by "The Tcpdump Group". Sources of pcap_dump are here on Github.
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Anyone know of a C IDE that lists the declared functions in the code on a sidebar?
It would be nice to click to go directly to the function instead of scrolling a lot. The code I work with is unfortunately a bit monolithic.
Of course, Eclipse is capable to show your code outline in the outline view.
See here: https://help.eclipse.org/oxygen/index.jsp?topic=%2Forg.eclipse.platform.doc.user%2Fconcepts%2Fcoutline.htm
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I wrote rules in Jess, which database should I use to store them?
Jess has no built-in capability for storing rules in a database; it works with flat files, either text or XML. To use a database, you'd have to implement code yourself to retrieve (and store) them. As such, there's not much we can do to help you choose a database, as Jess won't care.
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I want to use C to break a wav audio file into evenly spaced blocks. How could I do that? Are there any libraries that I could use (i'd prefer not to but I will if I have to)?
ffmpeg library will help you. you can do anything related to video and audio!.
Also see the following article maybe help you.
A Simple C Class to Manipulate WAV
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I have 3 files of C language code and their 2 header files. I would like to see the dependency graph of all functions getting called in these 3 files. Is there a tool on Windows to simplify this work?
Have you already tried doxygen in combination with the graphviz package?