This package consists of the executable (UCW), a default script file,
this file, and the library files. It is important that the header files
end up in a include subdirectory of the directory where UCW is found.
If you unzip this file using its path information ( use folder names ) this will
automatically happen. You can optionally specify the UnderC directory
with the environment variable UC_HOME note that this points to the directory
containing ucw.exe. If you do this, then you can copy the executable anywhere
and it will still be able to find the header files.
Using the UnderC Tokenizer Class
It s often necessary to parse complex text files, where standard i/o
is too clumsy. C programmers fall back on strtok(), but this can be
tricky to use properly. Besides, you are still responsible for keeping
strtok() fed with new input, and I don t like the schlepp.
Tokenizer is a text-parsing input stream, modelled after the (undocumented)
VCL TParser class, and based on the UnderC tokenizing preprocessor front-end.
The Stanford IBE library is a C implementation of the Boneh-Franklin
identity-based encryption scheme. (See Boneh and Franklin, "Identity-Based
Encryption from the Weil Pairing", CRYPTO 2001.)
There are a few modifications and additions. The Boneh-Franklin scheme is
used as a Key Encapsulation Mechanism, and off-the-shelf ciphers and HMACs
are used for the actual encryption. (See Lynn, "Authenticated Identity-Based
Encryption", available on eprint.
This library allows creating, modifying and extracting zip archives in the compatible way with PKZIP (2.5 and higher) and WinZip. Supported are all possible operations on the zip archive: creating, extracting, adding, deleting files from the archive, modifications of the existing archive. There is also the support for creating and extracting multiple disk archives (on non-removable devices as well) and for password encryption and decryption. This module uses compression and decompression functions from zlib library by Jean-loup Gailly and Mark Adler.
This manual describes the Call Library Function Node and the Code
Interface Node (CIN). The Call Library Function Node and the CIN are
the LabVIEW programming objects you use to call compiled code from
text-based programming languages. This manual includes reference
information about libraries of functions, memory and file manipulation
routines, and diagnostic routines that you can use with calls to external
code.