readme.txt   [plain text]


Copyright (c) 2002-2005, International Business Machines Corporation and others. All Rights Reserved.
strsrch: a sample program which finds the occurrences of a pattern string in a source string, using user-defined collation rules.

This sample demonstrates
         Creating a user-defined string search mechanism.
         Finding all occurrences of a pattern string in a given source string.
         
Files:
    strsrch.c                     Main source file
    strsrch.sln                   Windows MSVC workspace.  Double-click this to get started.
    strsrch.vcproj                Windows MSVC project file

To Build strsrch on Windows
    1.  Install and build ICU
    2.  In MSVC, open the workspace file icu\samples\strsrch\strsrch.sln
    3.  Choose a Debug or Release build.
    4.  Build.
	
To Run on Windows
    1.  Start a command shell window
    2.  Add ICU's bin directory to the path, e.g.
            set PATH=c:\icu\bin;%PATH%
        (Use the path to where ever ICU is on your system.)
    3.  cd into the strsrch directory, e.g.
            cd c:\icu\source\samples\strsrch\debug
    4.  Run it
            strsrch [options*] -source source_string -pattern pattern_string

To Build on Unixes
    1.  Build ICU.  strsrch is built automatically by default unless samples are turned off.
        Specify an ICU install directory when running configure,
        using the --prefix option.  The steps to build ICU will look something
        like this:
           cd <icu directory>/source
           runConfigureICU <platform-name> --prefix <icu install directory> [other options]
           gmake all
           
    2.  Install ICU, 
           gmake install
           
 To Run on Unixes
           cd <icu directory>/source/samples/strsrch
           
           gmake check
               -or- 

           export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=<icu install directory>/lib:.:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
           cal
           
           
 Note:  The name of the LD_LIBRARY_PATH variable is different on some systems.
        If in doubt, run the sample using "gmake check", and note the name of
        the variable that is used there.  LD_LIBRARY_PATH is the correct name
        for Linux and Solaris.