1
0
Fork 0
A hvif rendered in modern standard C without extra dependencies.
Go to file
Hans-Joerg Schurr a0873c9369 Simplify buildsystem
This rolls everything into one Makefile.am and fixes
`make distcheck`.
2020-05-30 21:47:13 +02:00
docs Simplify buildsystem 2020-05-30 21:47:13 +02:00
m4 Add build system 2020-02-21 19:12:20 +01:00
src Simplify buildsystem 2020-05-30 21:47:13 +02:00
.clang-format Add configuration files for dev environment 2020-02-21 18:50:27 +01:00
.gitignore Simplify buildsystem 2020-05-30 21:47:13 +02:00
LICENSE License under MIT license 2020-05-29 20:40:43 +02:00
Makefile.am Simplify buildsystem 2020-05-30 21:47:13 +02:00
README.md Change buildsystem to build a library 2020-05-29 23:27:03 +02:00
configure.ac Simplify buildsystem 2020-05-30 21:47:13 +02:00
shell.nix Change buildsystem to build a library 2020-05-29 23:27:03 +02:00

README.md

A simple library to render Haiku Vector Icons

⚠️ Do not use this library. It is not ready yet.

The Haiku operating system uses a custom format to represent vector icons. The Haiku Vector Icon Format (hvif) is optimized to create tiny files that can be saved with the file metadata. For a good technical overview of the format see this blog post by Leah Hanson. The goal of this library is to allow the usage of this format independent of the Haiku ecosystem.

The library is written in modern standard C and MIT licensed. When finished it will feature a parser and rasterizer without any dependencies beyond libc. Furthermore, a toy tool to convert hvif files into png files is included.

The author is not associated with the Haiku project.

Current State

The library is currently under heavy development. The current parser should be able to parse hvif files created with current Haiku builds, but is mostly untested. There is no standalone rasterizer yet, but an experimental rasterizer based on cairo is included. The purpose of this rasterizer is testing. It is not feature complete, but renders most real world icons reasonably well.

The next step is the preparation of a testing infrastructure. This should be done before work on the rasterizer begins.

Compiling

The build system is standard auto tools. To compile on a fresh clone run:

$ autoreconf -i
$ ./configure
$ make -j

Since no sensible functionality independent of cairo is implemented as of now, cairo is a hard dependency. On NixOS the included shell.nix script can be used to bring the dependencies and a couple of development tools intos cope.

HTML documentation can be generated with make html if Doxygen is installed.

Contribution

Contributions are very welcome. Please send patches or bugreports to commits@schurr.at. If you are unfamiliar with the Email based git workflow, see this excellent tutorial.