Go to file
2014-05-25 11:31:31 -07:00
tests initial checkin 2014-05-25 10:18:03 -07:00
README.md Update README.md 2014-05-25 11:31:31 -07:00
stb_c_lexer.h initial checkin 2014-05-25 10:18:03 -07:00
stb_image_write.h initial checkin 2014-05-25 10:18:03 -07:00
stb_image.c initial checkin 2014-05-25 10:18:03 -07:00
stb_perlin.h initial checkin 2014-05-25 10:18:03 -07:00
stb_textedit.h initial checkin 2014-05-25 10:18:03 -07:00
stb_truetype.h add stb_truetype 2014-05-25 11:10:31 -07:00
stb_vorbis.c initial checkin 2014-05-25 10:18:03 -07:00
stb.h initial checkin 2014-05-25 10:18:03 -07:00

stb

single-file public domain libraries for C/C++

library description
stb_image.c image loading/decoding from disk/memory: JPG, PNG, TGA, BMP, PSD, GIF, HDR, PIC
stb_vorbis.c decode ogg vorbis files from memory to float/16-bit signed output
stb_truetype.h parse, decode, and rasterize characters from truetype fonts
stb_image_write.h image writing to disk
stb.h helper functions for C, mostly redundant in C++
stb_c_lexer.h simplify writing parsers for C-like languages
stb_perlin.h revised Perlin noise (3D input, 1D output)
stb_textedit.h guts of a text editor for games etc implementing them from scratch

FAQ

What's the license?

These libraries are in the public domain (or the equivalent where that is not possible). You can do anything you want with them. You have no legal obligation to do anything else, although I appreciate attribution.

If I wrap an stb library in a new library, does the new library have to be public domain?

No.

A lot of these libraries seem redundant to existing open source libraries. Are they better somehow?

Generally they're only better in that they're easier to integrate, easier to use, and easier to release (single file; good API; no attribution requirement). They may be less featureful, slower, and/or use more memory. If you're already using an equivalent library, there's probably no good reason to switch.

Will you add more image types to stb_image.c?

If people submit them, I generally add them, but the goal of stb_image is less for applications like image viewer apps (which need to support every type of image under the sun) and more for things like games which can choose what images to use.

Are there other single-file public-domain libraries out there?

Yes. I'll put a list here when people remind me what they are.