// hello.cc -- example of a dynamically linked function for Octave. // To use this file, your version of Octave must support dynamic // linking. To find out if it does, type the command // // x = octave_config_info; x.DEFS // // at the Octave prompt. Support for dynamic linking is included if // the output contains the string -DWITH_DYNAMIC_LINKING=1. // // To compile this file, type the command // // mkoctfile hello.cc // // at the shell prompt. The script mkoctfile should have been // installed along with Octave. Running it will create a file called // hello.oct that can be loaded by Octave. To test the hello.oct // file, start Octave and type the command // // hello ("easy as", 1, 2, 3) // // at the Octave prompt. Octave should respond by printing // // Hello, world! // easy as // 1 // 2 // 3 // ans = 3 // Additional examples are available in the files in the src directory // of the Octave distribution that use the macro DEFUN_DLD_BUILTIN. // Currently, this includes the files // // balance.cc fft.cc ifft.cc minmax.cc sort.cc // chol.cc fft2.cc ifft2.cc pinv.cc svd.cc // colloc.cc filter.cc inv.cc qr.cc syl.cc // dassl.cc find.cc log.cc quad.cc // det.cc fsolve.cc lsode.cc qzval.cc // eig.cc givens.cc lu.cc rand.cc // expm.cc hess.cc minmax.cc schur.cc // // The difference between DEFUN_DLD and DEFUN_DLD_BUILTIN is that // DEFUN_DLD_BUILTIN can define a built-in function that is not // dynamically loaded if the operating system does not support dynamic // linking. To define your own dynamically linked functions you // should use DEFUN_DLD. #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include // DEFUN_DLD and the macros that it depends on are defined in the // files defun-dld.h, defun.h, and defun-int.h. // Note that the third parameter (nargout) is not used, so it is // omitted from the list of arguments to DEFUN_DLD in order to avoid // the warning from gcc about an unused function parameter. DEFUN_DLD (hello, args, , "[...] = hello (...)\n\ \n\ Print greeting followed by the values of all the arguments passed.\n\ Returns all arguments in reverse order.") { // The list of values to return. See the declaration in oct-obj.h octave_value_list retval; // This stream is normally connected to the pager. octave_stdout << "Hello, world!\n"; // The arguments to this function are available in args. int nargin = args.length (); // The octave_value_list class is a zero-based array of octave_value // objects. The declaration for the octave_value class is in the // file ov.h. The print() method will send its output to // octave_stdout, so it will also end up going through the pager. for (int i = 0; i < nargin; i++) { octave_value tmp = args (i); tmp.print (octave_stdout); retval (nargin-i-1) = tmp; } return retval; }