Comment by a_e_k

5 days ago

Author here. What a pleasant surprise to see this trending on the front page!

(I did post a Show HN at the time of the original release, https://github.com/nothings/stb) and by libraries inspired by those, all of which I've found very convenient. In particular, I like their convenience for small utilities written in a single .cpp file where I can just `g++ -O3 -o prog prog.cpp` or such to compile without even bothering with a makefile or CMake.

Since the implementation here is all within a single #ifdef block, I had figured that anyone who truly preferred separate .cpp and .h files could easily split it themselves in just a few minutes.

But anyway, I thought this would be a fun way of "giving back" to the STB header ecosystem and filling what looked to me like an obvious gap among the available header libraries. It started as something that I'd wished I'd had before, for doing some lightweight drawing on top of images, and it just kind of grew from there. (Yes, there was Skia and Cairo, but both seemed way heavier weight than they ought to be, and even just building Skia was an annoying chore.)

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Since I mentioned a v2.0, I do have a roadmap in mind with a few things for it: beside the small upgrades mentioned in the GitHub issues to support parts of newer <canvas> API specs (alternate fill rules, conic gradients, elliptical arcs, round rectangles) and text kerning, I'm thinking about porting it to a newer C++ standard such as C++20 (I intentionally limited v1.0 to C++03 so that it could be used in as many places as possible), possibly including a small optional library on top of it to parse and rasterize a subset of SVG, and an optional Python binding.