Date: Thu, 31 Jan 2008 10:12:35 -0500 From: "Jim Stapleton" <stapleton.41@gmail.com> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: C interpreters Message-ID: <80f4f2b20801310712q2ac3a2f6gd1436f1c84adb3cb@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <200801311512.50511.wundram@beenic.net> References: <80f4f2b20801310548g33ee5f48ne90c2e86cc33346d@mail.gmail.com> <200801311512.50511.wundram@beenic.net>
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Thanks, and that'll make shared (.so) libraries just fine? Well, that was certainly a relief. That very much describes the C interface I made already. I'm working on a alternate ports listing system, and I wanted to use something that I didn't mind programming in /and/ I knew should be available on any FreeBSD system without requireing more port installs, so I went with C or C++. I want it to be easy to write back-end database modules, in case people don't want to use the two that I write (SQLite2 and a my own flat-file system). There are only three functions that need wrapped: open, query, close. Open returns that void* pointer, query and close take it as the first argument. Any ideas on the C interpreter? It's been a while since I've done a lot of C/C++. Thanks, -Jim Stapleton
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