Short: Add support for MP3 ID3 tags to your app Author: Robert Leslie, Mark Malson, Brett Paterson, AmigaOS 4.0 compile by Spot / Up Rough Uploader: Varthall / Up Rough Type: dev/lib Version: 0.15b Architecture: ppc-amigaos >= 4.0.5 libid3tag - ID3 tag manipulation library Copyright (C) 2000-2004 Underbit Technologies, Inc. $Id: README,v 1.5 2004/01/23 09:41:32 rob Exp $ =============================================================================== INTRODUCTION libid3tag is a library for reading and (eventually) writing ID3 tags, both ID3v1 and the various versions of ID3v2. See the file `id3tag.h' for the current library interface. This package uses GNU libtool to arrange for zlib to be linked automatically when you link your programs with this library. If you aren't using GNU libtool, in some cases you may need to link with zlib explicitly: ${link_command} ... -lid3tag -lz =============================================================================== BUILDING AND INSTALLING Note that this library depends on zlib 1.1.4 or later. If you don't have zlib already, you can obtain it from: http://www.gzip.org/zlib/ You must have zlib installed before you can build this package. Windows Platforms libid3tag can be built under Windows using either MSVC++ or Cygwin. A MSVC++ project file can be found under the `msvc++' subdirectory. To build libid3tag using Cygwin, you will first need to install the Cygwin tools: http://www.cygwin.com/ You may then proceed with the following POSIX instructions within the Cygwin shell. Note that by default Cygwin will build a library that depends on the Cygwin DLL. You can use MinGW to build a library that does not depend on the Cygwin DLL. To do so, give the option --host=mingw32 to `configure'. Be certain you also link with a MinGW version of zlib. POSIX Platforms (including Cygwin) The code is distributed with a `configure' script that will generate for you a `Makefile' and a `config.h' for your platform. See the file `INSTALL' for generic instructions. The specific options you may want to give `configure' are: --disable-debugging do not compile with debugging support, and use more optimizations --disable-shared do not build a shared library By default the package will build a shared library if possible for your platform. If you want only a static library, use --disable-shared. If zlib is installed in an unusual place or `configure' can't find it, you may need to indicate where it is: ./configure ... CPPFLAGS="-I${include_dir}" LDFLAGS="-L${lib_dir}" where ${include_dir} and ${lib_dir} are the locations of the installed header and library files, respectively. Experimenting and Developing Further options for `configure' that may be useful to developers and experimenters are: --enable-debugging enable diagnostic debugging support and debugging symbols --enable-profiling generate `gprof' profiling code =============================================================================== COPYRIGHT Please read the `COPYRIGHT' file for copyright and warranty information. Also, the file `COPYING' contains the full text of the GNU GPL. Send inquiries, comments, bug reports, suggestions, patches, etc. to: Underbit Technologies, Inc. See also the MAD home page on the Web: http://www.underbit.com/products/mad/ ===============================================================================