Create gh-pages branch via GitHub

gh-pages
Krzysztof Gabis 12 years ago
parent ddd27b407a
commit 2ef517e9aa
  1. 2
      index.html
  2. 2
      params.json

@ -56,7 +56,7 @@
<p>Here is a function, which prints basic commit info (date, sha and author) from a github repository. It's also included in tests.c file, you can just uncomment and run it.</p>
<div class="highlight"><pre><span class="kt">void</span> <span class="nf">print_commit_info</span><span class="p">(</span><span class="k">const</span> <span class="kt">char</span> <span class="o">*</span><span class="n">username</span><span class="p">,</span> <span class="k">const</span> <span class="kt">char</span> <span class="o">*</span> <span class="n">repo</span><span class="p">)</span> <span class="p">{</span>
<div class="highlight"><pre><span class="kt">void</span> <span class="nf">print_commit_info</span><span class="p">(</span><span class="k">const</span> <span class="kt">char</span> <span class="o">*</span><span class="n">username</span><span class="p">,</span> <span class="k">const</span> <span class="kt">char</span> <span class="o">*</span><span class="n">repo</span><span class="p">)</span> <span class="p">{</span>
<span class="n">JSON_Value</span> <span class="o">*</span><span class="n">root_value</span><span class="p">;</span>
<span class="n">JSON_Array</span> <span class="o">*</span><span class="n">commits</span><span class="p">;</span>
<span class="n">JSON_Object</span> <span class="o">*</span><span class="n">commit</span><span class="p">;</span>

@ -1 +1 @@
{"body":"##About\r\nParson is a small [json](http://json.org) parser and reader written in C. \r\n\r\n##Features\r\n* Small (only 2 files)\r\n* Simple API\r\n* Addressing json values with dot notation (similiar to C structs or objects in most OO languages, e.g. \"objectA.objectB.value\")\r\n* C89 compatible\r\n* Test suites\r\n\r\n##Installation\r\nRun the following code:\r\n```\r\ngit clone https://github.com/kgabis/parson.git\r\n```\r\nand copy parson.h and parson.c to you source code tree.\r\n\r\n##Example\r\nHere is a function, which prints basic commit info (date, sha and author) from a github repository. It's also included in tests.c file, you can just uncomment and run it.\r\n```c\r\nvoid print_commit_info(const char *username, const char * repo) {\r\n JSON_Value *root_value;\r\n JSON_Array *commits;\r\n JSON_Object *commit;\r\n int i;\r\n \r\n char curl_command[512];\r\n char cleanup_command[256];\r\n char *output_filename = \"commits.json\";\r\n \r\n /* it ain't pretty, but it's not a libcurl tutorial */\r\n sprintf(curl_command, \"curl \\\"https://api.github.com/repos/%s/%s/commits\\\"\\\r\n > %s 2> /dev/null\", username, repo, output_filename);\r\n sprintf(cleanup_command, \"rm -f %s\", output_filename);\r\n system(curl_command);\r\n \r\n /* parsing json and validating output */\r\n root_value = json_parse_file(output_filename); \r\n if (root_value == NULL || json_value_get_type(root_value) != JSONArray) { \r\n system(cleanup_command);\r\n return;\r\n }\r\n \r\n /* getting array from root value and printing commit info */\r\n commits = json_value_get_array(root_value);\r\n printf(\"%-10.10s %-10.10s %s\\n\", \"Date\", \"SHA\", \"Author\");\r\n for (i = 0; i < json_array_get_count(commits); i++) {\r\n commit = json_array_get_object(commits, i);\r\n printf(\"%.10s %.10s %s\\n\",\r\n json_object_dotget_string(commit, \"commit.author.date\"),\r\n json_object_get_string(commit, \"sha\"),\r\n json_object_dotget_string(commit, \"commit.author.name\"));\r\n }\r\n \r\n /* cleanup code */\r\n json_value_free(root_value);\r\n system(cleanup_command);\r\n}\r\n```\r\nCalling ```print_commit_info(\"torvalds\", \"linux\");``` prints: \r\n```\r\nDate SHA Author\r\n2012-10-15 dd8e8c4a2c David Rientjes\r\n2012-10-15 3ce9e53e78 Michal Marek\r\n2012-10-14 29bb4cc5e0 Randy Dunlap\r\n2012-10-15 325adeb55e Ralf Baechle\r\n2012-10-14 68687c842c Russell King\r\n2012-10-14 ddffeb8c4d Linus Torvalds\r\n...\r\n```\r\n\r\n##Important\r\nParson currently supports hexadecimal and octal numbers, but they're not a part of JSON standard, so you shouldn't use them.\r\n\r\n##License\r\n[The MIT License (MIT)](http://opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php)","name":"parson","google":"UA-35563760-2","tagline":"Small json parser and reader written in C.","note":"Don't delete this file! It's used internally to help with page regeneration."}
{"note":"Don't delete this file! It's used internally to help with page regeneration.","body":"##About\r\nParson is a small [json](http://json.org) parser and reader written in C. \r\n\r\n##Features\r\n* Small (only 2 files)\r\n* Simple API\r\n* Addressing json values with dot notation (similiar to C structs or objects in most OO languages, e.g. \"objectA.objectB.value\")\r\n* C89 compatible\r\n* Test suites\r\n\r\n##Installation\r\nRun the following code:\r\n```\r\ngit clone https://github.com/kgabis/parson.git\r\n```\r\nand copy parson.h and parson.c to you source code tree.\r\n\r\n##Example\r\nHere is a function, which prints basic commit info (date, sha and author) from a github repository. It's also included in tests.c file, you can just uncomment and run it.\r\n```c\r\nvoid print_commit_info(const char *username, const char *repo) {\r\n JSON_Value *root_value;\r\n JSON_Array *commits;\r\n JSON_Object *commit;\r\n int i;\r\n \r\n char curl_command[512];\r\n char cleanup_command[256];\r\n char *output_filename = \"commits.json\";\r\n \r\n /* it ain't pretty, but it's not a libcurl tutorial */\r\n sprintf(curl_command, \"curl \\\"https://api.github.com/repos/%s/%s/commits\\\"\\\r\n > %s 2> /dev/null\", username, repo, output_filename);\r\n sprintf(cleanup_command, \"rm -f %s\", output_filename);\r\n system(curl_command);\r\n \r\n /* parsing json and validating output */\r\n root_value = json_parse_file(output_filename); \r\n if (root_value == NULL || json_value_get_type(root_value) != JSONArray) { \r\n system(cleanup_command);\r\n return;\r\n }\r\n \r\n /* getting array from root value and printing commit info */\r\n commits = json_value_get_array(root_value);\r\n printf(\"%-10.10s %-10.10s %s\\n\", \"Date\", \"SHA\", \"Author\");\r\n for (i = 0; i < json_array_get_count(commits); i++) {\r\n commit = json_array_get_object(commits, i);\r\n printf(\"%.10s %.10s %s\\n\",\r\n json_object_dotget_string(commit, \"commit.author.date\"),\r\n json_object_get_string(commit, \"sha\"),\r\n json_object_dotget_string(commit, \"commit.author.name\"));\r\n }\r\n \r\n /* cleanup code */\r\n json_value_free(root_value);\r\n system(cleanup_command);\r\n}\r\n```\r\nCalling ```print_commit_info(\"torvalds\", \"linux\");``` prints: \r\n```\r\nDate SHA Author\r\n2012-10-15 dd8e8c4a2c David Rientjes\r\n2012-10-15 3ce9e53e78 Michal Marek\r\n2012-10-14 29bb4cc5e0 Randy Dunlap\r\n2012-10-15 325adeb55e Ralf Baechle\r\n2012-10-14 68687c842c Russell King\r\n2012-10-14 ddffeb8c4d Linus Torvalds\r\n...\r\n```\r\n\r\n##Important\r\nParson currently supports hexadecimal and octal numbers, but they're not a part of JSON standard, so you shouldn't use them.\r\n\r\n##License\r\n[The MIT License (MIT)](http://opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php)","name":"parson","google":"UA-35563760-2","tagline":"Small json parser and reader written in C."}
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