commit | dcab2ba7cbe0ebab593a1f2f378155ae30024561 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Kryštof Korb <krystof@korb.cz> | Mon Feb 12 21:14:15 2024 |
committer | Kryštof Korb <krystof@korb.cz> | Mon Feb 12 21:14:15 2024 |
tree | c3b7b2c0b589ba9de19d4fd8b432bb76d227b443 | |
parent | 8a7e1cfa05bb3567d06615e5f7b54c4827a052e9 [diff] |
Add 3rd party bindings to README
Compact Encoding Detection(CED for short) is a library written in C++ that scans given raw bytes and detect the most likely text encoding.
Basic usage:
#include "compact_enc_det/compact_enc_det.h" const char* text = "Input text"; bool is_reliable; int bytes_consumed; Encoding encoding = CompactEncDet::DetectEncoding( text, strlen(text), nullptr, nullptr, nullptr, UNKNOWN_ENCODING, UNKNOWN_LANGUAGE, CompactEncDet::WEB_CORPUS, false, &bytes_consumed, &is_reliable);
You need CMake to build the package. After unzipping the source code , run autogen.sh
to build everything automatically. The script also downloads Google Test framework needed to build the unittest.
$ cd compact_enc_det $ ./autogen.sh ... $ bin/ced_unittest
On Windows, run cmake .
to download the test framework, and generate project files for Visual Studio.
D:\packages\compact_enc_det> cmake .
Have you created bindings for another language? Open a PR and add it to the list!