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							- Writing a table generator
 - 
 - This documentation is preliminary.
 - Parts of the API are not good and should be changed.
 - 
 - Basic concepts
 - 
 - A table generator consists of two files, *_tablegen.c and *_tablegen.h.
 - The .h file will provide the variable declarations and initialization
 - code for the tables, the .c calls the initialization code and then prints
 - the tables as a header file using the tableprint.h helpers.
 - Both of these files will be compiled for the host system, so to avoid
 - breakage with cross-compilation neither of them may include, directly
 - or indirectly, config.h or avconfig.h.
 - This means that e.g. libavutil/mathematics.h is ok but libavutil/libm.h is not.
 - Due to this, the .c file or Makefile may have to provide additional defines
 - or stubs, though if possible this should be avoided.
 - In particular, CONFIG_HARDCODED_TABLES should always be defined to 0.
 - 
 - The .c file
 - 
 - This file should include the *_tablegen.h and tableprint.h files and
 - anything else it needs as long as it does not depend on config.h or
 - avconfig.h.
 - In addition to that it must contain a main() function which initializes
 - all tables by calling the init functions from the .h file and then prints
 - them.
 - The printing code typically looks like this:
 -     write_fileheader();
 -     printf("static const uint8_t my_array[100] = {\n");
 -     write_uint8_t_array(my_array, 100);
 -     printf("};\n");
 - 
 - This is the more generic form, in case you need to do something special.
 - Usually you should instead use the short form:
 -     write_fileheader();
 -     WRITE_ARRAY("static const", uint8_t, my_array);
 - 
 - write_fileheader() adds some minor things like a "this is a generated file"
 - comment and some standard includes.
 - tablegen.h defines some write functions for one- and two-dimensional arrays
 - for standard types - they print only the "core" parts so they are easier
 - to reuse for multi-dimensional arrays so the outermost {} must be printed
 - separately.
 - If there's no standard function for printing the type you need, the
 - WRITE_1D_FUNC_ARGV macro is a very quick way to create one.
 - See libavcodec/dv_tablegen.c for an example.
 - 
 - 
 - The .h file
 - 
 - This file should contain:
 -  - one or more initialization functions
 -  - the table variable declarations
 - If CONFIG_HARDCODED_TABLES is set, the initialization functions should
 - not do anything, and instead of the variable declarations the
 - generated *_tables.h file should be included.
 - Since that will be generated in the build directory, the path must be
 - included, i.e.
 - #include "libavcodec/example_tables.h"
 - not
 - #include "example_tables.h"
 - 
 - Makefile changes
 - 
 - To make the automatic table creation work, you must manually declare the
 - new dependency.
 - For this add a line similar to this:
 - $(SUBDIR)example.o: $(SUBDIR)example_tables.h
 - under the "ifdef CONFIG_HARDCODED_TABLES" section in the Makefile.
 
 
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