That was exactly what I was looking for. I am again
surprised that my needs are <again> already covered by boost in some
way.
Thank you,
Isaac Lascasas.
Sent: Sunday, August 17, 2008 7:03 PM
Subject: Re: [Boost-users] building and calling "dynamic c++" from a
hostprogram
Isaac,
On Sun, Aug 17, 2008 at 9:27 AM, Isaac Lascasas
<pisiiki3@hotmail.com>
wrote:
Hello I have the following question:
If you want to make a program that will let the
user write "scripts" directly in c++, how will you do it? I am strugling my
mind these days looking for a solution to this problem and I want to know if
boost already address this situation. My intuition tells me that the process
will probably consist on invoking bjam to build a dynamic lib with the
"script" and then call the built code in the host binary. But how can this be
done keeping it portable and clean? Obviously it won't work if
you don't have a build environment configured but anyway it may be a
very interesting feature.
Regards,
Isaac
Lascasas.
That kind of depends on what exactly you want. I put an example in
Boost.Extension that automatically compiles arbitrary code (using Boost.Build -
but you could modify it for other compilers) into a shared library and then
loads and runs it:
http://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/browser/sandbox/libs/extension/examples/runtime_compilationI
haven't gotten around to writing documentation for the example, but plan to do
it in the next few weeks. The code is relatively straightforward
though.
As far as a full scripting environment for C++, there are full
libraries that do this - but you'd have a tough time persuading me that Python
or another actual scripting language (perhaps with Boost.Python) wasn't a better
solution. I guess if all you have is a hammer...
Jeremy Pack
http://boost-extension.blogspot.com
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