# ww: count words in 50 lines of C ## Desiderata - Simplicity: Just count words, as delimited by: spaces, tabs, newlines. - No flags. - Avoid off-by-one errors. - Allow piping, as well as reading files. - Small. - Linux only. ## Comparison with wc. The GNU utils version ([github](https://github.com/coreutils/coreutils/tree/master/src/wc.c), [savannah](http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=coreutils.git;a=blob;f=src/wc.c;hb=HEAD)) is a bit over 1K lines of C. It does many things and checks many possible failure modes. The busybox version ([git.busybox.net](https://git.busybox.net/busybox/tree/coreutils/wc.c)) of wc is much shorter, at 257 lines, while striving to be [POSIX-compliant](https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/), meaning it has flags. The plan9port version of wc ([github](https://github.com/9fans/plan9port/blob/master/src/cmd/wc.c)) implements some sort of table method, in 352 lines. So does the [plan9](https://9p.io/sources/plan9/sys/src/cmd/wc.c) version, which is worse documented, but shorter. [Here](https://github.com/dspinellis/unix-history-repo/blob/Research-V7-Snapshot-Development/usr/src/cmd/wc.c) is a version of wc from UNIX V7, at 86 lines, and allowing for both word and line counts. I couldn't find a version in UNIX V6. Of all the versions, I think I understand this one best. ## Steps: - [x] Look into how C utilities both read from stdin and from files. - [x] Program first version of the utility - [x] Compare with other implementations, see how they do it, after I've read my own version - [x] Compare with gnu utils. - [x] Compare with musl/busybox implementations, - ~~Maybe make some pull requests, if I'm doing something better? => doesn't seem like it~~ - [ ] Install to ww, but check that ww is empty (installing to wc2 or smth would mean that you don't save that many keypresses vs wc -w) - ~~[ ] Could use zig? => Not for now~~ - [ ] Look specifically at how other versions - [ ] Distinguish between reading from stdin and reading from a file - If it doesn't have arguments, read from stdin. - [ ] Open files, read characters. - [ ] Write version that counts lines - [ ] Document reading from user-inputed stdin (end with Ctrl+D)