I'm looking for a good collection of libraries for ANSI-C, stuff for handling vectors, hash maps, binary tress, string processing, etc.
6 Answers
Try glib? It's used by GTK+, but it can also be used on other platforms. You can also try Apache APR, which is used by the Apache web server and some of their other C components, or NSPR, which is used by Mozilla projects in C.
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2The problem with glib is that everything has been g'd to death, with all kinds of unnecessary junk like gint and gchar, and once your program is written using this library, it's almost like using some kind of dialect of C. It has a lot of useful functions in it though.– user181548Oct 19, 2009 at 13:05
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4That's unfortunately a fact of life with C. The ANSI C89 standard didn't specify exact sizes for types, so libraries that need them have always had to invent their own. c.f. OpenGL, Win32, etc... Very, very few large APIs are written to the core types. Oct 19, 2009 at 21:58
You might also find this question useful:
Container Class / Library for C
As well, this book might be interesting:
The full source code is on the CD and it has code for most of those data structures and algorithms.
check also gnulib's data structures. This library also provides many other features as well as portable layer to ANSI/non-ANSI compilers and POSIX/non-POSIX systems.