Flashnux

GNU/Linux man pages

Livre :
Expressions régulières,
Syntaxe et mise en oeuvre :

ISBN : 978-2-7460-9712-4
EAN : 9782746097124
(Editions ENI)

GNU/Linux

CentOS 2.1AS

(Slurm)

swig(1)


swig

swig

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
OPTIONS
INTERFACE FILES
OUTPUT
RESOURCES
AUTHOR
LIMITATIONS
BUGS
VERSION
SEE ALSO

NAME

swig - produce scripting language wrapper code from an interface specification file

SYNOPSIS

swig [ options ] file.i

DESCRIPTION

swig generates wrapper code needed to integrate C,C++, and Objective-C functions and variables with Tcl, Perl, Python, and Guile and produces documentation. Consult the SWIG user manual for more details.

OPTIONS

The following major options are available. More options are available by typing ’swig -help’.

−tcl

Generate Tcl wrappers

−tcl8

Generate Tcl8.0 wrappers

−perl5

Generate Perl5 wrappers

−python

Generate Python wrappers

−perl4

Generate Perl4 wrappers

−guile

Generate Guile-iii wrappers

−dascii

Generate ASCII format documentation

−dlatex

Generate LaTeX format documentation

−dhtml

Generate HTML format documentation

−dnone

Generate no documentation

−I incdir

Look in incdir for SWIG related include files

−llibfile

Append a SWIG library file to the input.

−D symbol

Define a symbol symbol for conditional compilation.

−v

verbose mode (perhaps overly verbose)

−version

Print SWIG version information

−nocoment

Ignore all comments in interface file

−strict n

Set pointer type-checking strictness to n n may be 0, 1 or 2.

−o outfile

Change the name of the output file.

−c

Do not include SWIG runtime functions (used for creating multi-module packages).

−c++

Enable special processing for C++.

−objc

Enable Objective-C parsing.

−make_default

Generate default constructors and destructors.

−co

Check a file out of the SWIG library.

−ci

Check a file into the SWIG library (must have write permission)

−stat

Display statistics.

−help

Print all of the available command line options.

INTERFACE FILES

The interface file is specified on the swig command line as the file to operate on. You may specify only one file on the command line. (See the include directive in the user´s manual for ways around this.)

As input, an interface file (typically with a .i suffix) must be given. A minimal specification of this file is as follows:

%module mymodule
%{
/* Include your headers here */
%}

/* List variables and function prototypes in ANSI C syntax */

For example :

%module example
%{
#include "my_header.h"
%}

extern int My_variable;
extern double foo(double a, double b);
extern void bar(char *);

OUTPUT

Given the input "file.i". swig produces an output file called "file_wrap.c" (You can override this using the -o option). This file should be compiled with the C/C++ compiler and linked with the rest of your code.

RESOURCES

SWIG documentation and updates are available at http://www.cs.utah.edu/~beazley/SWIG

AUTHOR

Man page written by Patrick Tullmann. SWIG is all Dave´s. (Dave Beazley, that is.)

LIMITATIONS

Hah! Bring it all on.

BUGS

None reported at this time.

VERSION

SWIG 1.1

SEE ALSO

Tcl(n), python(1), perl(1)



swig(1)