critcl::emap - CriTcl - Wrap Support - Enum en- and decoding
Be welcome to the C Runtime In Tcl (short: CriTcl), a system for embedding and using C code from within Tcl scripts.
This document is the reference manpage for the critcl::emap package. This package provides convenience commands for advanced functionality built on top of both critcl core and package critcl::iassoc.
C level libraries often use enumerations or integer values to encode information, like the state of a system. Tcl bindings to such libraries now have the task of converting a Tcl representation, i.e. a string into such state, and back. Note here that the C-level information has to be something which already exists. The package does not create these values. This is in contrast to the package critcl::enum which creates an enumeration based on the specified symbolic names.
This package was written to make the declaration and management of such enumerations and their associated conversions functions easy, hiding all attendant complexity from the user.
Its intended audience are mainly developers wishing to write Tcl packages with embedded C code.
This package resides in the Core Package Layer of CriTcl.
This command defines C functions for the conversion of the named state code into a Tcl string, and vice versa. The underlying mapping tables are automatically initialized on first access (if not fully constant), and finalized on interpreter destruction.
The definition dictionary provides the mapping from the Tcl-level symbolic names of the state to their C expressions (often the name of the macro specifying the actual value). Note here that the C-level information has to be something which already exists. The package does not create these values. This is in contrast to the package critcl::enum which creates an enumeration based on the specified symbolic names.
Further note that multiple strings can be mapped to the same C expression. When converting to Tcl the first string for the mapping is returned. An important thing to know: If all C expressions are recognizable as integer numbers and their covered range is not too large (at most 50) the package will generate code using direct and fast mapping tables instead of using a linear search.
If the option -nocase is specified then the encoder will match strings case-insensitively, and the decoder will always return a lower-case string, regardless of the string's case in the definition.
If the option -mode is specified its contents will interpreted as a list of access modes to support. The two allowed modes are c and tcl. Both modes can be used together. The default mode is tcl.
The package generates multiple things (declarations and definitions) with names derived from name, which has to be a proper C identifier. Some of the things are generated conditional on the chosen modes.
The tcl-mode function for encoding a Tcl string into the equivalent state code. Its signature is
int name_encode (Tcl_Interp* interp, Tcl_Obj* state, int* result);
The return value of the function is a Tcl error code, i.e. TCL_OK, TCL_ERROR, etc.
The c-mode function for encoding a C string into the equivalent state code. Its signature is
int name_encode_cstr (const char* state);
The return value of the function is the encoded state, or -1 if the argument is not a vlaid state.
The tcl-mode function for decoding a state code into the equivalent Tcl string. Its signature is
Tcl_Obj* name_decode (Tcl_Interp* interp, int state);
The c-mode function for decoding a state code into the equivalent C string. Its signature is
const char* name_decode_cstr (int state);
The return value of the function is the C string for the state, or NULL if the state argument does not contain a valid state value.
A header file containing the declarations for the conversion functions, for use by other parts of the system, if necessary.
The generated file is stored in a place where it will not interfere with the overall system outside of the package, yet also be available for easy inclusion by package files (csources).
For mode tcl the command registers a new argument-type for critcl::cproc with critcl, encapsulating the encoder function.
For mode tcl the command registers a new result-type for critcl::cproc with critcl, encapsulating the decoder function.
The example shown below is the specification for the possible modes of entry (normal, no feedback, stars) used by the Tcl binding to the linenoise library.
package require Tcl 8.6 package require critcl 3.2 critcl::buildrequirement { package require critcl::emap } critcl::emap::def hiddenmode { no 0 n 0 off 0 false 0 0 0 all 1 yes 1 y 1 on 1 true 1 1 1 stars 2 } -nocase # Declarations: hiddenmode.h # Encoder: int hiddenmode_encode (Tcl_Interp* interp, Tcl_Obj* state, int* result); # Decoder: Tcl_Obj* hiddenmode_decode (Tcl_Interp* interp, int state); # ResultType: hiddenmode # ArgumentType: hiddenmode
Andreas Kupries
This document, and the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and other problems. Please report such at https://github.com/andreas-kupries/critcl. Please also report any ideas for enhancements you may have for either package and/or documentation.
C code, Embedded C Code, Tcl Interp Association, bitmask, bitset, code generator, compile & run, compiler, dynamic code generation, dynamic compilation, flags, generate package, linker, on demand compilation, on-the-fly compilation, singleton
Glueing/Embedded C code
Copyright © 2011-2024 Andreas Kupries