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20:35
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A: fread like functionality for reading from an arbitrary stream

chqrlieYou may want to check if the POSIX functions fmemopen and open_memstream are available on your system: #include <stdio.h> FILE *fmemopen(void *buf, size_t size, const char *mode); FILE *open_memstream(char **ptr, size_t *sizeloc); fmemopen returns a FILE * that you can use with fread and other ...

This can't be an option, I use MSVC and Windows. I don't want to switch to a different compiler just to get a POSIX feature
I didn't find a single 3rd party library which implements streams. Is it that unheard of in C? How do other parsers deal with it, considering many binary format parsers are implemented in C?
@demberto: you say I myself work on Windows and I want cross platform support that's why I am sticking to the standard library The problem with this platform is its plethoric API riddled with quirks rooted in legacy choices. It is difficult to write cross platform code with MSVC on Windows, this compiler keeps insisting on using the so called secure functions, which are implemented with APIs that are not compatible with the ones included in the C Standard.
@demberto: For your parsing problem, you should probably define a structure with a pointer to the memory block holding the file data and some parsing context and define functions that will update this structure while producing parsed items as you go. Avoid naming your function read as this name is used for a standard system call on POSIX systems.
@chqrlie I can disable those warnings with a single macro definition _CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS 1.
@JonathanLeffler This answer was given 2 after I said in a comment below the question that I need cross platform support, my bad I didn't edit the question.
@demberto: yes you can! you seem experienced enough to write an appropriate platform independent parser...
@chqrlie cmon is it so hard? Png, jpg all are implemented in c and they are much complicated formats then what i want to implement.
20:35
@demberto: no, it is probably not difficult, albeit you do not give any hint about the file format. Cross platform code must work with both classes of endianness, honor alignment constraints, handle varying integer type sizes... Using stream functions would probably be a bad idea anyway.
@demberto: What does the file format look like?
@chqrlie Its a propreitary format called flp, I have already written a parser in Python. I want to create a shell extension around it, so I tried C++ but got lost in the templates and variants. So I am hoping C will make it possible somehow. The format itself is little endian. And #pragma push willl have its alternatives
The C# parser might be a better start... I could not find a proper spec for this file format
IMHO, C will force you to write a simpler parser than C++
Yes this is an undocumented format. The C# parser you talk about is probably FLParser.Net
Its object model doesn't allow editing. PyFLP the parser I wrote supports it
I just hate c++ at this point, since its really hard
Interesting, the javascript parser node-flp parses the file into an object hierarchy but I did not see an unparser to write an updated flp file. This is your goal?
I hate C++ too. It shows sometimes in my contributions :)
Coding in Windows is a headache too, but I left this platform 15 years ago :)
You could also invent a readable text version for the FLP file contents. You would need a converters from/to FLP but this would allow for manual editing in VSC or your favorite editor...
20:54
Yes basically all parsers you see just allow reading. Creating a parsed object from a binary representation isn't hard and can be implemented from a global switch case statement like the C# parser does.
Implementing editing capabilities took me a lot of efforts and reverse engineering to truly understand the format
I am not boasting but PyFLP is the only parser which can allows modification and save it back in its binary form.
Getting a readable version isn't what I aim to do since it has zero use, and I cannot regenerate the binary data back for a format I don't completely understand
If you look at PyFLP it "patches" the binary data when properties from the exposed end user interface change.
Basically its impossible to create a deserialiser/marshaller without knowing the entire format else it will create a garbage result
21:15
I understand the feeling... I battled many times with undocumented file formats most of which have gone extinct since. Good luck with your efforts!
Sure thanks :)

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