ref: dd4e50bef04f9c87866112e14151a24ead53699d
parent: 851791011b7bc59b764e5aaf992900f44c9fc02c
author: Sigrid Solveig Haflínudóttir <[email protected]>
date: Mon Mar 4 20:07:32 EST 2024
update readme
--- a/README.md
+++ b/README.md
@@ -26,21 +26,8 @@
| speed | ultra-fast | slow | fast |
| tag writing | no, not a goal | yes | yes |
-CPU time (784 files: mp3, ogg, flac):
-
-| | libtags | taglib |
-|:---------------|:-----------------|:-----------------|
-| files cached | real 0m0.027s | real 0m0.155s |
-| | user 0m0.014s | user 0m0.102s |
-| | sys 0m0.012s | sys 0m0.053s |
-| | | |
-| cache dropped | real 0m1.158s | real 0m1.628s |
-| | user 0m0.024s | user 0m0.211s |
-| | sys 0m0.132s | sys 0m0.187s |
-
## Usage
-Just compile it to an archive (`.a`) and link to your program. Use it in your code
-by including `tags.h`, that's the API. Documentation is in the header.
+`tags.h` is API which contains the documentation.
-See `examples/readtags.c`. You can compile it on Linux like so: `gcc examples/readtags.c *.c -I. -o readtags`.
+`examples/readtags.c` is a simple example that reads and prints out tags of the files specified on the command line.