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Thread: Compression Algorithm.

  1. #1
    Guest

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    Hello,
    It's me again...

    I need a really good compression algorithm,
    since I know some people are not very bright *Dennis tries not to look at parksie * I also need this to be able to decompress.


    I am looking for something similar to what winzip does,

    although I would much appreciate the Zip file algorithm, thats not what I wan't.

    me and a friend on ICQ exchange files and photo's rather often, and the size of the files, winzip, winace, etc. just isn't hitting it..

    I am thinking of using a RAR file as a last resort, but I would really like to know how to make things like this..



    I know, since this is my project I am working on, you aren't going to want to write it for me, and i don't wan't you to either,
    but I need some examples or something, on how I would do something like this,

    these are the file types i am planning on compressing,

    GIF you know

    BMP you know

    JPG you know

    TXT you know

    EXE you know

    ZIP well, if it's a real good algo. it may be able to be done

    PNG a picture format

    WSZ winamp skin

    ICO you know

    DAT a binary format file for storing information

    HTM/L well this is just text, so need not be mentioned.

    MP3 mpeg layer 3 (music)

    DLL you know



    Well, actually, I would like it to be able to compress all file types, but the picture files are the ones I am most worried about compressing effectivly.

    I would also like to know how to make self extracting executable files.

    like I said, I do not want the code for all of this stuff, I just want some sample code, and an explanation of how it can be or is being done.



    Thank you very much,
    I would prefer a reply before saturday afternoon, because I want to start working on this before I go back to school on monday.
    Thank you very much,


    Dennis.

  2. #2
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    Hey - is Dax trying to set a little competition up?

    First, take a look at this:
    1. Compression algorithm (deflate)

    The deflation algorithm used by gzip (also zip and zlib) is a variation of
    LZ77 (Lempel-Ziv 1977, see reference below). It finds duplicated strings in
    the input data. The second occurrence of a string is replaced by a
    pointer to the previous string, in the form of a pair (distance,
    length). Distances are limited to 32K bytes, and lengths are limited
    to 258 bytes. When a string does not occur anywhere in the previous
    32K bytes, it is emitted as a sequence of literal bytes. (In this
    description, `string' must be taken as an arbitrary sequence of bytes,
    and is not restricted to printable characters.)

    Literals or match lengths are compressed with one Huffman tree, and
    match distances are compressed with another tree. The trees are stored
    in a compact form at the start of each block. The blocks can have any
    size (except that the compressed data for one block must fit in
    available memory). A block is terminated when deflate() determines that
    it would be useful to start another block with fresh trees. (This is
    somewhat similar to the behavior of LZW-based _compress_.)

    Duplicated strings are found using a hash table. All input strings of
    length 3 are inserted in the hash table. A hash index is computed for
    the next 3 bytes. If the hash chain for this index is not empty, all
    strings in the chain are compared with the current input string, and
    the longest match is selected.

    The hash chains are searched starting with the most recent strings, to
    favor small distances and thus take advantage of the Huffman encoding.
    The hash chains are singly linked. There are no deletions from the
    hash chains, the algorithm simply discards matches that are too old.

    To avoid a worst-case situation, very long hash chains are arbitrarily
    truncated at a certain length, determined by a runtime option (level
    parameter of deflateInit). So deflate() does not always find the longest
    possible match but generally finds a match which is long enough.

    deflate() also defers the selection of matches with a lazy evaluation
    mechanism. After a match of length N has been found, deflate() searches for
    a longer match at the next input byte. If a longer match is found, the
    previous match is truncated to a length of one (thus producing a single
    literal byte) and the process of lazy evaluation begins again. Otherwise,
    the original match is kept, and the next match search is attempted only N
    steps later.

    The lazy match evaluation is also subject to a runtime parameter. If
    the current match is long enough, deflate() reduces the search for a longer
    match, thus speeding up the whole process. If compression ratio is more
    important than speed, deflate() attempts a complete second search even if
    the first match is already long enough.

    The lazy match evaluation is not performed for the fastest compression
    modes (level parameter 1 to 3). For these fast modes, new strings
    are inserted in the hash table only when no match was found, or
    when the match is not too long. This degrades the compression ratio
    but saves time since there are both fewer insertions and fewer searches.


    2. Decompression algorithm (inflate)

    2.1 Introduction

    The real question is, given a Huffman tree, how to decode fast. The most
    important realization is that shorter codes are much more common than
    longer codes, so pay attention to decoding the short codes fast, and let
    the long codes take longer to decode.

    inflate() sets up a first level table that covers some number of bits of
    input less than the length of longest code. It gets that many bits from the
    stream, and looks it up in the table. The table will tell if the next
    code is that many bits or less and how many, and if it is, it will tell
    the value, else it will point to the next level table for which inflate()
    grabs more bits and tries to decode a longer code.

    How many bits to make the first lookup is a tradeoff between the time it
    takes to decode and the time it takes to build the table. If building the
    table took no time (and if you had infinite memory), then there would only
    be a first level table to cover all the way to the longest code. However,
    building the table ends up taking a lot longer for more bits since short
    codes are replicated many times in such a table. What inflate() does is
    simply to make the number of bits in the first table a variable, and set it
    for the maximum speed.

    inflate() sends new trees relatively often, so it is possibly set for a
    smaller first level table than an application that has only one tree for
    all the data. For inflate, which has 286 possible codes for the
    literal/length tree, the size of the first table is nine bits. Also the
    distance trees have 30 possible values, and the size of the first table is
    six bits. Note that for each of those cases, the table ended up one bit
    longer than the ``average'' code length, i.e. the code length of an
    approximately flat code which would be a little more than eight bits for
    286 symbols and a little less than five bits for 30 symbols. It would be
    interesting to see if optimizing the first level table for other
    applications gave values within a bit or two of the flat code size.


    2.2 More details on the inflate table lookup

    Ok, you want to know what this cleverly obfuscated inflate tree actually
    looks like. You are correct that it's not a Huffman tree. It is simply a
    lookup table for the first, let's say, nine bits of a Huffman symbol. The
    symbol could be as short as one bit or as long as 15 bits. If a particular
    symbol is shorter than nine bits, then that symbol's translation is duplicated
    in all those entries that start with that symbol's bits. For example, if the
    symbol is four bits, then it's duplicated 32 times in a nine-bit table. If a
    symbol is nine bits long, it appears in the table once.

    If the symbol is longer than nine bits, then that entry in the table points
    to another similar table for the remaining bits. Again, there are duplicated
    entries as needed. The idea is that most of the time the symbol will be short
    and there will only be one table look up. (That's whole idea behind data
    compression in the first place.) For the less frequent long symbols, there
    will be two lookups. If you had a compression method with really long
    symbols, you could have as many levels of lookups as is efficient. For
    inflate, two is enough.

    So a table entry either points to another table (in which case nine bits in
    the above example are gobbled), or it contains the translation for the symbol
    and the number of bits to gobble. Then you start again with the next
    ungobbled bit.

    You may wonder: why not just have one lookup table for how ever many bits the
    longest symbol is? The reason is that if you do that, you end up spending
    more time filling in duplicate symbol entries than you do actually decoding.
    At least for deflate's output that generates new trees every several 10's of
    kbytes. You can imagine that filling in a 2^15 entry table for a 15-bit code
    would take too long if you're only decoding several thousand symbols. At the
    other extreme, you could make a new table for every bit in the code. In fact,
    that's essentially a Huffman tree. But then you spend two much time
    traversing the tree while decoding, even for short symbols.

    So the number of bits for the first lookup table is a trade of the time to
    fill out the table vs. the time spent looking at the second level and above of
    the table.

    Here is an example, scaled down:

    The code being decoded, with 10 symbols, from 1 to 6 bits long:

    A: 0
    B: 10
    C: 1100
    D: 11010
    E: 11011
    F: 11100
    G: 11101
    H: 11110
    I: 111110
    J: 111111

    Let's make the first table three bits long (eight entries):

    000: A,1
    001: A,1
    010: A,1
    011: A,1
    100: B,2
    101: B,2
    110: -> table X (gobble 3 bits)
    111: -> table Y (gobble 3 bits)

    Each entry is what the bits decode to and how many bits that is, i.e. how
    many bits to gobble. Or the entry points to another table, with the number of
    bits to gobble implicit in the size of the table.

    Table X is two bits long since the longest code starting with 110 is five bits
    long:

    00: C,1
    01: C,1
    10: D,2
    11: E,2

    Table Y is three bits long since the longest code starting with 111 is six
    bits long:

    000: F,2
    001: F,2
    010: G,2
    011: G,2
    100: H,2
    101: H,2
    110: I,3
    111: J,3

    So what we have here are three tables with a total of 20 entries that had to
    be constructed. That's compared to 64 entries for a single table. Or
    compared to 16 entries for a Huffman tree (six two entry tables and one four
    entry table). Assuming that the code ideally represents the probability of
    the symbols, it takes on the average 1.25 lookups per symbol. That's compared
    to one lookup for the single table, or 1.66 lookups per symbol for the
    Huffman tree.

    There, I think that gives you a picture of what's going on. For inflate, the
    meaning of a particular symbol is often more than just a letter. It can be a
    byte (a "literal"), or it can be either a length or a distance which
    indicates a base value and a number of bits to fetch after the code that is
    added to the base value. Or it might be the special end-of-block code. The
    data structures created in inftrees.c try to encode all that information
    compactly in the tables.


    Jean-loup Gailly Mark Adler
    [email protected] [email protected]


    References:

    [LZ77] Ziv J., Lempel A., ``A Universal Algorithm for Sequential Data
    Compression,'' IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, Vol. 23, No. 3,
    pp. 337-343.

    ``DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification'' available in
    ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1951.txt
    Then, this: ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/infozip/zlib/
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

  3. #3
    Guest
    1) Well, this isn't going to be commercial, if it's good enough maybe, but it wasn't intended to be, i wanted a compresion program that works really good for me and my friend to transfer "photo's" that we downloaded.. of course from "good and wholesome" websites...

    and
    2) The link was broken, and I hardly understood a thing in the quote.


    and is there anyway to write a compression algorithm without a DLL or someone elses code(I wasn't sure, but I kind of gathered that it was someone elses code that was being used in the qoute)



    Thanks,
    Dennis

  4. #4
    Guest
    BTW, what is faster, fstream.h or CreateFile(API)?
    I am sure the API is faster, but what I am really trying to ask, is which one is the best to use?
    like is fstream.h too slow, or is it a little slow, but better because it's easier than CreateFile??


    Thanks...

  5. #5
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    The quote tells you how to write your own code. However, it will be quite tricky in VB, as well as very slow. Since ZLib is royalty-free, I can't see how distributing a 60K DLL can be too painful .

    I haven't done any tests, but I would expect <fstream> to be slower, since there's loads of interface over it. The fastest methods are probably going to be either CreateFile or _open (the really low-level but quite nice method).

    I actually never used CreateFile, because I preferred something portable and less complex.

    Final words: It really depends what you want to do. At the moment, speed isn't that important, so use whichever one is easiest.
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

  6. #6
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    ewwwwww VB, I really don't like that language anymore....


    C++ is the best... I hear ADA's pretty cool too, but I haven't had a chance to fire up the compiler...



    BTW, I have never done it before, how do I use a DLL in C++?


    and how do I use _open ??


    Thanks,
    Dennis

  7. #7
    Frenzied Member HarryW's Avatar
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    Well ADA is like a military-standard version of Pascal. I say military-standard because it's so strict in what you do and how you do it (even stricter than Pascal) that the military like it because it can be verified that it will work correctly. Which is important when you're writing a missile guidance system or some life-support program
    Harry.

    "From one thing, know ten thousand things."

  8. #8
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    some life-support program
    So that's why they call it a "Crash Cart" .
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

  9. #9
    denniswrenn
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    Just bringing up this thread again. I haven't made the program I was talking about, but am in need of a compression library, and I have just looked at the home of ZLib and found a nice lil' package with the static library with it too..


    Does anybody have any sample source code for using zLib? The example that comes with it is in C, and I'm scared of C

  10. #10
    Frenzied Member Vlatko's Avatar
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    Why are you so scareeed of C, dennis. It shouldn't be so hard to concert it to C++ or it should?? Where is thet example, i would also like to have a look at it.
    I am become death, the destroyer of worlds.
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  11. #11
    denniswrenn
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    See how scary it is!!
    Attached Files Attached Files

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  13. #13
    Frenzied Member Vlatko's Avatar
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    Horror movie replacement.

    No, really, C++ would also be scary.
    I am become death, the destroyer of worlds.
    mail:[email protected]

    • Visual Basic 6.0 & .NET
    • Visual C++ 6.0 & .NET
    • ASP
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  14. #14
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    Dennis - I've seen scarier code than that That's actually pretty nice, although it's not in Standard C (function parameter syntax is old-style).

    Anyway, what are you *actually* trying to accomplish?
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

  15. #15
    denniswrenn
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    Well, I was trying to make some code for someone on rentacoder.com so I could make lots of money... but when I read the complete specs I found that it's a $5,000 job and would require much time and effort.... I'm not trying that one anymore, but I'd still like to know how to use zlib...

  16. #16
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    This might help (a little).
    Attached Files Attached Files
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

  17. #17
    wossname
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    Just out of interest, how much do you guys use classes (not including ones from libraries). In most programs you write or only seldom, or what?

    I'm just trying to get my head around operator overloading in classes. My brain doesn't meet the minimum specifications for this I don't think!

  18. #18
    denniswrenn
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    Originally posted by parksie
    This might help (a little).
    That came with zlib, didn't it?

    I knew I should've opened all the files

  19. #19
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    my 2 cents

    Search for Lior's posts. About half of them must be related to compression. He's trying to develop a better compression algorythim.

  20. #20
    Monday Morning Lunatic parksie's Avatar
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    Dennis - Yep

    GD - AFAIK he hasn't got too far with it
    I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
    -- Linus Torvalds

  21. #21
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    AFAIK?

    I dont know that, but his threads have plenty of information about compression.

    BTW, that's a new acronym AFAIK. What does it mean?

  22. #22
    denniswrenn
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    As Far As I Know

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