A reasonably-complete implementation of stdlib.h,
and much much more.
This was my first project at 42 São Paulo:
an implementation of many stdlib.h functions from scratch.
I've used it on most projects so far. I learned about memory manipulations, string utilities and linked lists. As a developer I've been using these functions for years in some form or another, yet I had no idea how they really work. Figuring them out was an initiation of sorts.
It has over 300 functions so far,
including a heap-less printf that handles floats and long doubles.
All functions have a doxygen-style documentation comment,
and most have an example main.
I prioritize modularity and readability:
small functions with catchy names that do one thing well.
All you need is a shell and a C compiler like gcc or clang.
To compile the entire thing just clone the repo and run make:
$ git clone https://github.com/librity/ft_libft.git
$ cd ft_libft
$ makeThis will generate a libft.a archive, which you can compile with
any of the example files:
$ cp examples/ft_itoa.c examples/example.c
$ gcc -g -I ./includes examples/example.c libft.a
$ ./a.outYou can call most stdlib.h functions as you normally would
but with the prefix ft_:
ft_putstr("Hello, world!\n");This project is partly tested with the
Unity framework.
To run all tests, run make's test rule:
make tests- Implement missing
stdlib.hfunctions-
atof() -
atoi() -
atol() -
atoll() -
strtod() -
strtof() -
strtol() -
strtold() -
strtoll() -
strtoul() -
strtoull() -
rand() -
srand() -
calloc() -
free() -
malloc() -
realloc() -
abort() -
atexit() -
at_quick_exit() -
exit() -
getenv() -
quick_exit() -
system() -
_Exit() -
bsearch() -
qsort() -
abs() -
div() -
labs() -
ldiv() -
llabs() -
lldiv() -
mblen() -
mbtowc() -
wctomb() -
mbstowcs() -
wcstombs()
-
Norminette Github Action by @AdrianWR
Part of the larger 42 Network, 42 São Paulo is a software engineering school that offers a healthy alternative to traditional education:
- It doesn't have any teachers and classes.
- Students learn by cooperating and correcting each other's work (peer-to-peer learning).
- Its focus is as much on social skills as it is on technical skills.
- It's completely free to anyone that passes its selection process - The Piscine
It's an amazing school, and I'm grateful for the opportunity.