This tool compiles in the developer command prompt in C. It produces output to the terminal displaying the contents in the "array_name.c" file that is created. Note that some terminals may display the "\b" character.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <assert.h>
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
assert(argc == 2);
char* fn = argv[1];
// Open file passed by reference
FILE* f = fopen(fn, "rb");
// Opens a new file in the programs location
FILE* fw = fopen("array_name.c","w");
// Next two lines write the strings to the console and .c file
printf("char array_name[] = {\n");
fprintf(fw,"char hex_array[] = {\n");
// Declare long integer for number of columns in the array being made
unsigned long n = 0;
// Loop until end of file
while((!feof(f))){
// Declare character that stores the bytes from hex file
unsigned char c;
// Ignore failed elements read
if(fread(&c, 1, 1, f) == 0) break;
// Prints to console and file, "0x%.2X" ensures format for all
// read bytes is like "0x00"
printf("0x%.2X,", (int)c);
fprintf(fw,"0x%.2X,", (int)c);
// Increment counter, if 20 columns have been made, begin new line
++n;
if(n % 20 == 0){
printf("\n");
fprintf(fw,"\n");
}
}
// fseek places cursor to overwrite extra "," made from previous loop
// this is for the new .c file. Since "\b" is technically a character
// to remove the extra "," requires overwriting it.
fseek(fw, -1, SEEK_CUR);
// "\b" moves cursor back one in the terminal
printf("\b};\n");
fprintf(fw,"};\n");
fclose(f);
fclose(fw);
}