CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2010/ch3 3i IC: Difference between revisions
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use strict; use warnings;<br> | |||
use Inline Java => <<'EOJ';<br> | |||
public class Person<br> | |||
{<br> | |||
:// The class body is shown in the Java Code above<br> | |||
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EOJ<br> | |||
my $student = Person->new("John Smith");<br> | |||
print $student->getName(), "\n"; | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 16:04, 4 October 2010
Mixing Static and Dynamic Language Code
Introduction
Many middleware solutions have been developed to combine static and dynamic languages to take advantage of both types of code. Previous wiki chapters have discussed JRuby, a Java implementation Ruby. These solutions allow programmers the productivity luxuries of newer dynamic languages with the speed, low-level functionality, and pre-existing code base of older static languages. Below, we will give even more examples of mixing several widely used dynamic languages with C, C++, and Java.
Mixing Dynamic Code and C/C++
Ruby
Ruby has an inherent relationship with the C language since the current Ruby implementation is written in C. Cplus2Ruby is a gem that allows programmers to call Ruby code within C++ and vice versa. Assuming an installation of Ruby, the Cplus2Ruby can be installed with the following command [2]:
gem install cplus2ruby
Python
Using Boost
Boost allows programmers to seamlessly expose C++ classes and function to Python and vice versa. No special tools are needed (however, a build tool will be referenced later). All that is required are the Boost libraries and a C++ compiler. Boost is designed to allow Python to use C++ code with no internal modification to the C++ code that will be wrapped.
Exposing Functions
Below is a “Hello, World!” example.
C++ function
string greet()
{
- return "Hello, World!";
}
Add to C++ so it can be exposed to Python
#include <boost/python.hpp>
BOOST_PYTHON_MODULE(hello_ext)
{
- using namespace boost::python;
- def("greet", greet);
}
Python code that calls C++
import hello_ext # parameter passed to BOOST_PYTHON_MODULE
print hello.greet()
>> Hello, World!
Exposing Classes
C++ Class Declaration
class Person
{
- private string name;
- void setName(string name)
- {
- this->name = name;
- }
- string getName()
- {
- return name;
- }
};
Boost.Python C++ Wrapper
#include <boost/python.hpp>
using namespace boost::python;
BOOST_PYTHON_MODULE(person)
{
- class_<Person>("person")
- .def("getName", &Person::getName)
- .def("setName", &Person::setName);
}
Python Code
import person
student = person.Person()
student.setName('John')
student.getName()
>> John
Lua
Mixing Dynamic Code and Java
Perl
Using Inline::Java
Java Code
public class Person
{
- String name;
- public getName()
- {
- return name;
- }
- public setName(String newName)
- {
- this.name = newName;
- }
}
Perl Code:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict; use warnings;
use Inline Java => <<'EOJ';
public class Person
{
- // The class body is shown in the Java Code above
}
EOJ
my $student = Person->new("John Smith");
print $student->getName(), "\n";
References
[1] Steve Vinoski. Ruby Extensions. Internet Computing, IEEE, Vol. 10, Issue 5. 2006. pp. 85-87.
[2] Michael Neumann. Cplus2Ruby - Gluing C++ and Ruby together in an OO manner. http://rubydoc.info/gems/cplus2ruby/1.2.0/frames
[3] Dave Abrahams. Boost.Python. http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_44_0/libs/python/doc/index.html
[4] Phil Crow. Bringing Java into Perl. 2003. http://www.perl.com/pub/2003/11/07/java.html