There are 3 functions written in Rust that live in lib/src/lib.rs :
*`litelib_initialize_new`
* create a new client/connection and brand new wallet
*`litelib_initialize_new_from_phrase`
* create a new client/connection from a seedphrase (restoring from seedphrase)
*`litelib_initialize_existing`
* create a new client/connection with an already existing wallet
The Rust code calls it a "LightClient" while the C++ of SDL calls it a "Connection".
When `litelib_initialize_existing` or `litelib_initialize_new_from_phrase` return successfully, they return the string "OK" (which is not JSON).
When `litelib_initialize_new` returns successfully it returns JSON that looks like :
```
{"seed":"seed","birthday":birthday}
```
where "seed" is a 24 word seed and birthday is an integer block height.
So when calling these 3 functions, which looks almost the same in the calling code, the code which checks if they worked will be different, depending on what each returns on success.
When checking the return value of `litelib_initialize_existing` or `litelib_initialize_new_from_phrase` it should look like :
Yes, `isEmpty()` is not a very strict check, we could actually check for valid-looking JSON (starts with a { and ends with a }) as well as making sure the keys "seed" and "birthday" exist. Please implement this.