Awesome
vec
A type-safe dynamic array implementation for C.
Installation
The vec.c and vec.h files can be dropped into an existing C project and compiled along with it.
Usage
Before using a vector it should first be initialised using the vec_init()
function.
vec_int_t v;
vec_init(&v);
vec_push(&v, 123);
vec_push(&v, 456);
To access the elements of the vector directly the vector's data
field can be
used.
printf("%d\n", v.data[1]); /* Prints the value at index 1 */
The current length of the vector is stored in the length
field of the vector
printf("%d\n", v.length); /* Prints the length of the vector */
When you are done with the vector the vec_deinit()
function should be called
on it. This will free any memory the vector allocated during use.
vec_deinit(&v);
Types
vec.h provides the following predefined vector types:
Contained Type | Type name |
---|---|
void* | vec_void_t |
char* | vec_str_t |
int | vec_int_t |
char | vec_char_t |
float | vec_float_t |
double | vec_double_t |
To define a new vector type the vec_t()
macro should be used:
/* Creates the type uint_vec_t for storing unsigned ints */
typedef vec_t(unsigned int) uint_vec_t;
Functions
All vector functions are macro functions. The parameter v
in each function
should be a pointer to the vec struct which the operation is to be performed
on.
vec_t(T)
Creates a vec struct for containing values of type T
.
/* Typedefs the struct `fp_vec_t` as a container for type FILE* */
typedef vec_t(FILE*) fp_vec_t;
vec_init(v)
Initialises the vector, this must be called before the vector can be used.
vec_deinit(v)
Deinitialises the vector, freeing the memory the vector allocated during use; this should be called when we're finished with a vector.
vec_push(v, val)
Pushes a value to the end of the vector. Returns 0 if the operation was successful, otherwise -1 is returned and the vector remains unchanged.
vec_pop(v)
Removes and returns the value at the end of the vector.
vec_splice(v, start, count)
Removes the number of values specified by count
, starting at the index
start
.
vec_splice(&v, 2, 4); /* Removes the values at indices 2, 3, 4 and 5 */
vec_swapsplice(v, start, count)
Removes the number of values specified by count
, starting at the index
start
; the removed values are replaced with the last count
values of the
vector. This does not preserve ordering but is O(1).
vec_insert(v, idx, val)
Inserts the value val
at index idx
shifting the elements after the index
to make room for the new value.
/* Inserts the value 123 at the beginning of the vec */
vec_insert(&v, 0, 123);
Returns 0 if the operation was successful, otherwise -1 is returned and the vector remains unchanged.
vec_sort(v, fn)
Sorts the values of the vector; fn
should be a qsort-compatible compare
function.
vec_swap(v, idx1, idx2)
Swaps the values at the indices idx1
and idx2
with one another.
vec_truncate(v, len)
Truncates the vector's length to len
. If len
is greater than the vector's
current length then no change is made.
vec_clear(v)
Clears all values from the vector reducing the vector's length to 0.
vec_first(v)
Returns the first value in the vector. This should not be used on an empty vector.
vec_last(v)
Returns the last value in the vector. This should not be used on an empty vector.
vec_reserve(v, n)
Reserves capacity for at least n
elements in the given vector; if n
is
less than the current capacity then vec_reserve()
does nothing. Returns 0 if
the operation was successful, otherwise -1 is returned and the vector remains
unchanged.
vec_compact(v)
Reduces the vector's capacity to the smallest size required to store its current number of values. Returns 0 if the operation is successful, otherwise -1 is returned and the vector remains unchanged.
vec_pusharr(v, arr, count)
Pushes the contents of the array arr
to the end of the vector. count
should
be the number of elements in the array.
vec_extend(v, v2)
Appends the contents of the v2
vector to the v
vector.
vec_find(v, val, idx)
Finds the first occurrence of the value val
in the vector. idx
should be an
int where the value's index will be written; idx
is set to -1 if val
could
not be found in the vector.
vec_remove(v, val)
Removes the first occurrence of the value val
from the vector. If the val
is not contained in the vector then vec_remove()
does nothing.
vec_reverse(v)
Reverses the order of the vector's values in place. For example, a vector
containing 4, 5, 6
would contain 6, 5, 4
after reversing.
vec_foreach(v, var, iter)
Iterates the values of the vector from the first to the last. var
should be a
variable of the vector's contained type where the value will be stored with
each iteration. iter
should be an int used to store the index during
iteration.
/* Iterates and prints the value and index of each value in the float vec */
int i; float val;
vec_foreach(&v, val, i) {
printf("%d : %f\n", i, val);
}
vec_foreach_rev(v, var, iter)
Iterates the values of the vector from the last to the first. See
vec_foreach()
vec_foreach_ptr(v, var, iter)
Iterates the value pointers of the vector from first to last. var
should be a
variable of the vector's contained type's pointer. See vec_foreach()
.
/* Iterates and prints the value and index of each value in the float vector */
int i; float *val;
vec_foreach_ptr(&v, val, i) {
printf("%d : %f\n", i, *val);
}
vec_foreach_ptr_rev(v, var, iter)
Iterates the value pointers of the vector from last to first. See
vec_foreach_ptr()
License
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.