542 lines
28 KiB
C
542 lines
28 KiB
C
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/**
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* PANDA 3D SOFTWARE
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* Copyright (c) Carnegie Mellon University. All rights reserved.
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*
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* All use of this software is subject to the terms of the revised BSD
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* license. You should have received a copy of this license along
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* with this source code in a file named "LICENSE."
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*
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* @file interrogate_interface.h
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* @author frang
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* @date 1999-11-09
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*/
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#ifndef INTERROGATE_INTERFACE_H
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#define INTERROGATE_INTERFACE_H
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#include "dtoolbase.h"
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#ifdef __cplusplus
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extern "C" {
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#endif
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// This file defines the interface to the interrogate database. This database
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// is generated by running interrogate on a package's source code; interrogate
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// parses the C++ syntax, determines the public interface, generates C-style
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// wrapper functions where necessary, and builds up a table of functions and
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// classes and their relationships.
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/*
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* Some of this data (in particular, the wrapper functions, and the table of
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* unique names for these functions) is linked in along with the codebase,
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* permanently a part of the library file, and is always available; the rest
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* of it is stored in external files (named *.in) and read in when needed.
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* For this reason, most of the interface functions defined here will force a
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* load of the complete interrogate database the first time any of them are
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* called. The three exceptions are noted below; they are
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* interrogate_wrapper_has_pointer(), interrogate_wrapper_pointer(), and
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* interrogate_get_wrapper_by_unique_name().
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*/
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// The interface here is intentionally made to be as simple as possible, to
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// maximize portability. All that is required of a scripting language is a
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// foreign function interface capable of calling C functions.
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// In general, the interrogate database consists of a number of query
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// functions that allow the caller to walk through the list of available
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// types, functions, manifests, etc. For each of these, a unique index number
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// is returned; this index number may then be used to query details about the
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// type, function, etc. The index numbers are only guaranteed to remain
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// unchanged during a particular session; from one session to another they may
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// differ.
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// All index numbers are ordinary integers. Each has a unique typedef here
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// for clarity of meaning, but they may be treated as ordinary integers by the
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// caller.
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typedef int ManifestIndex;
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typedef int ElementIndex;
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typedef int TypeIndex;
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typedef int FunctionIndex;
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typedef int FunctionWrapperIndex;
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typedef int MakeSeqIndex;
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// Atomic types are those that are built in to C. This enumerated value is
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// returned by interrogate_type_atomic_token() when a type is known to be one
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// of the atomic types.
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enum AtomicToken {
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AT_not_atomic = 0,
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AT_int = 1,
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AT_float = 2,
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AT_double = 3,
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AT_bool = 4,
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AT_char = 5,
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AT_void = 6,
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// There isn't an atomic string type in C, but there is one in almost all
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// other languages. If -string is supplied to the interrogate command line,
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// functions may be reported as returning and accepting objects of type
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// atomic string. For the C calling convention wrappers, atomic string
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// means (const char *); for other calling convention wrappers, atomic
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// string means whatever the native string representation is.
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AT_string = 7,
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AT_longlong = 8,
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// This is not a type that C has, but C++ and many scripting languages do;
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// it indicates a null value, or the absence of any value.
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AT_null = 9,
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};
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB void interrogate_add_search_directory(const char *dirname);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB void interrogate_add_search_path(const char *pathstring);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_error_flag();
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// Manifest Symbols
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/*
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* These correspond to #define constants that appear in the C code. (These
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* are only the manifest constants--those #define's that take no parameters.
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* Manifest functions, #define's that take one or more parameters, are not
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* exported.) They cannot be set, of course, but they often have a meaningful
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* value that may be get. The scripting language may choose to get the value
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* as a literal string via interrogate_manifest_definition(), or as a value of
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* a particular type (whatever type interrogate thinks it is), as returned by
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* the getter function given by interrogate_manifest_getter().
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*/
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_number_of_manifests();
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB ManifestIndex interrogate_get_manifest(int n);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB ManifestIndex interrogate_get_manifest_by_name(const char *manifest_name);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_manifest_name(ManifestIndex manifest);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_manifest_definition(ManifestIndex manifest);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_manifest_has_type(ManifestIndex manifest);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_manifest_get_type(ManifestIndex manifest);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_manifest_has_getter(ManifestIndex manifest);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionIndex interrogate_manifest_getter(ManifestIndex manifest);
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// An exception is made for manifest constants that have an integer type
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// value, since these are so common. The scripting language can query these
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// values directly, which saves having to generate a wrapper function for each
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// stupid little manifest. In this case, there will be no getter function
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// available.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_manifest_has_int_value(ManifestIndex manifest);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_manifest_get_int_value(ManifestIndex manifest);
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// Data Elements
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// These correspond to data members of a class, or global data elements.
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// Interrogate automatically generates a getter function and, if possible, a
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// setter function.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_element_name(ElementIndex element);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_element_scoped_name(ElementIndex element);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_element_has_comment(ElementIndex element);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_element_comment(ElementIndex element);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB ElementIndex interrogate_get_element_by_name(const char *element_name);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB ElementIndex interrogate_get_element_by_scoped_name(const char *element_name);
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// Be careful with this function. The element's bare type is not likely to be
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// directly useful to the scripting language. This is a different answer than
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// the return value of the getter.
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// The element type might well be something concrete that the scripting
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// language can't handle directly, e.g. a Node, while the getter will return
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// (and the setter accept) a pointer to a Node, which is what the scripting
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// language actually works with.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_element_type(ElementIndex element);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_element_has_getter(ElementIndex element);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionIndex interrogate_element_getter(ElementIndex element);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_element_has_setter(ElementIndex element);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionIndex interrogate_element_setter(ElementIndex element);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_element_is_sequence(ElementIndex element);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_element_is_mapping(ElementIndex element);
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// Global Data
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// This is the list of global data elements.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_number_of_globals();
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB ElementIndex interrogate_get_global(int n);
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// Functions
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// There is a unique FunctionIndex associated with each of the functions that
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// interrogate knows about. This includes member functions, nonmember
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// functions, synthesized getters and setters, and upcastdowncast functions.
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// These are the global (nonmember) functions that appear outside of any class
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// definition.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_number_of_global_functions();
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionIndex interrogate_get_global_function(int n);
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// This can be used to traverse through *all* the functions known to
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// interrogate. It's usually not what you want, since this includes global
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// functions, class methods, and synthesized functions like upcasts and
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// downcasts. You probably want to use instead
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// interrogate_number_of_global_functions(), above.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_number_of_functions();
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionIndex interrogate_get_function(int n);
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// This is the function's name. It is not unique; it may be shared between
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// multiple different functions that have the same name but different
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// parameter types (this is C++'s function overloading). Two different classes
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// might also have member functions that have the same name, or the same name
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// as a global function (but also see the scoped_name, below).
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_function_name(FunctionIndex function);
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// The scoped name is the function name prefixed with the name of the class
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// that includes the function, if the function is a class method. If it is a
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// global function, the scoped name is the same as the name returned above.
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// In the absence of C++ function overloading, this name will be unique to
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// each function.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_function_scoped_name(FunctionIndex function);
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// This returns the C++ comment written for the function, either in the header
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// file or in the .C file, or both.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_function_has_comment(FunctionIndex function);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_function_comment(FunctionIndex function);
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// This defines the function prototype as it appears in the C++ source, useful
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// primarily for documentation purposes.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_function_prototype(FunctionIndex function);
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// This can be used to determine the class that the function is a method for,
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// if the function is a class method.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_function_is_method(FunctionIndex function);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_function_class(FunctionIndex function);
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// This returns the module name reported for the function, if available.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_function_has_module_name(FunctionIndex function);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_function_module_name(FunctionIndex function);
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// This returns the library name reported for the function, if available.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_function_has_library_name(FunctionIndex function);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_function_library_name(FunctionIndex function);
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// This is true for virtual member functions. It's not likely that this will
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// be important to the scripting language.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_function_is_virtual(FunctionIndex function);
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// The actual callable function interface is defined via one or more wrappers
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// for each function. (There might be multiple wrappers for the same function
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// to allow for default parameter values.)
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// At present, interrogate can generate wrappers that use the C calling
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// convention or the Python calling convention. The set of wrappers that will
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// actually be available depends on the parameters passed to the interrogate
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// command line.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_function_number_of_c_wrappers(FunctionIndex function);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionWrapperIndex interrogate_function_c_wrapper(FunctionIndex function, int n);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_function_number_of_python_wrappers(FunctionIndex function);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionWrapperIndex interrogate_function_python_wrapper(FunctionIndex function, int n);
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// Function wrappers
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// These define the way to call a given function. Depending on the parameters
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// supplied to interrogate, a function wrapper may be able to supply either a
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// void * pointer to the function, or the name of the function in the library,
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// or both.
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// This returns the actual name of the wrapper function, as opposed to the
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// name of the function it wraps. It's probably not terribly useful to the
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// scripting language, unless the -fnames option was given to interrogate, in
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// which case this name may be used to call the wrapper function (see
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// is_callable_by_name, below). It will usually be an ugly hashed name, not
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// intended for human consumption.
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// Don't confuse this with the unique_name, below. The two are related, but
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// not identical.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_wrapper_name(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper);
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// This returns true if -fnames was given to interrogate, making the wrapper
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// function callable directly by its name.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_wrapper_is_callable_by_name(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper);
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// This returns the C++ comment written for the function wrapper, usually from
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// the .cpp file. There may be a different comment for each overload of a
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// given function.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_wrapper_has_comment(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_wrapper_comment(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper);
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// Every function wrapper has zero or more parameters and may or may not have
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// a return value. Each parameter has a type and may or may not have a name.
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// For member functions, the first parameter may be a 'this' parameter, which
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// should receive a pointer to the class object. (If a member function does
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// not have a 'this' parameter as its first parameter, it is a static member
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// function, also called a class method.)
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_wrapper_has_return_value(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_wrapper_return_type(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper);
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/*
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* Sometimes interrogate must synthesize a wrapper that allocates its return
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* value from the free store. Other times (especially if -refcount is
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* supplied to interrogate), interrogate will automatically increment the
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* count of a reference-counted object that it returns. In cases like these,
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* interrogate_wrapper_caller_manages_return_value() will return true, and it
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* is the responsibility of the scripting language to eventually call the
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* destructor supplied by interrogate_wrapper_return_value_destructor() on
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* this value when it is no longer needed (which will generally be the same
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* destructor as that for the class). Otherwise, this function will return
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* false, and the scripting language should *not* call any destructor on this
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* value.
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*/
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_wrapper_caller_manages_return_value(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionIndex interrogate_wrapper_return_value_destructor(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper);
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// These define the parameters of the function.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_wrapper_number_of_parameters(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_wrapper_parameter_type(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper, int n);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_wrapper_parameter_has_name(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper, int n);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_wrapper_parameter_name(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper, int n);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_wrapper_parameter_is_this(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper, int n);
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// This returns a pointer to a function that may be called to invoke the
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// function, if the -fptrs option to return function pointers was specified to
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// interrogate. Be sure to push the required parameters on the stack,
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// according to the calling convention, before calling the function.
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// These two functions may be called without forcing a load of the complete
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// interrogate database.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_wrapper_has_pointer(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB void *interrogate_wrapper_pointer(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper);
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// This function will return a name that is guaranteed to be unique to this
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// particular function wrapper, and that will (usually) be consistent across
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// multiple runtime sessions. (It will only change between sessions if the
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// database was regenerated in the interim with some new function that
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// happened to introduce a hash conflict.)
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// The unique name is an ugly hashed name, not safe for human consumption.
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// Its sole purpose is to provide some consistent way to identify function
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// wrappers between sessions.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_wrapper_unique_name(FunctionWrapperIndex wrapper);
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// This function provides a reverse-lookup on the above unique name, returning
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// the wrapper index corresponding to the given name. It depends on data
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// having been compiled directly into the library, and thus is only available
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// if the option -unique-names was given to interrogate.
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// This function may be called without forcing a load of the complete
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// interrogate database.
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionWrapperIndex interrogate_get_wrapper_by_unique_name(const char *unique_name);
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// MakeSeqs
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// These are special synthesized methods that iterate through a list. They
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// are generated in C++ code via the MAKE_SEQ macro. The normal pattern is
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// that a pair of actual C++ methods like get_num_things() and get_thing(n)
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// are used to synthesize a new method called get_things().
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_make_seq_seq_name(MakeSeqIndex make_seq);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_make_seq_scoped_name(MakeSeqIndex make_seq);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_make_seq_has_comment(ElementIndex element);
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_make_seq_comment(ElementIndex element);
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// The name of the real method that returns the length, e.g. "get_num_things"
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_make_seq_num_name(MakeSeqIndex make_seq);
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// The name of the real method that returns the nth element, e.g. "get_thing"
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EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_make_seq_element_name(MakeSeqIndex make_seq);
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// Types
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// These are all the types that interrogate knows about. This includes atomic
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// types like ints and floats, type wrappers like pointers and const pointers,
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// enumerated types, and classes.
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/*
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* Two lists of types are maintained: the list of global types, which includes
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* only those types intended to be wrapped in the API (for instance, all of
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* the classes). The second list is the complete list of all types, which
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* probably does not need to be traversed--this includes *all* types known to
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* the interrogate database, including simple types and pointers and const
|
||
|
* pointers to classes. These types are necessary to fully define all of the
|
||
|
* function parameters, but need not themselves be wrapped.
|
||
|
*/
|
||
|
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_number_of_global_types();
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_get_global_type(int n);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_number_of_types();
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_get_type(int n);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_get_type_by_name(const char *type_name);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_get_type_by_scoped_name(const char *type_name);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_get_type_by_true_name(const char *type_name);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_global(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_type_name(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_type_scoped_name(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_type_true_name(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// A given type might be a nested type, meaning it is entirely defined within
|
||
|
// (and scoped within) some different C++ class. In this case, the
|
||
|
// type_name() will return the local name of the type as seen within the
|
||
|
// class, while the scoped_name() will return the fully-qualified name of the
|
||
|
// type, and is_nested() and outer_class() can be used to determine the class
|
||
|
// it is nested within.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_nested(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_type_outer_class(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_has_comment(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_type_comment(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// This returns the module name reported for the type, if available.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_has_module_name(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_type_module_name(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// This returns the library name reported for the type, if available.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_has_library_name(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_type_library_name(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
// If interrogate_type_is_atomic() returns true, the type is one of the basic
|
||
|
// C types enumerated in AtomicToken, above. The type may then be further
|
||
|
// modified by one or more of unsigned, signed, long, longlong, or short.
|
||
|
// However, it will not be a pointer.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_atomic(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB AtomicToken interrogate_type_atomic_token(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_unsigned(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_signed(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_long(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_longlong(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_short(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// If interrogate_type_is_wrapped() returns true, this is a composite type
|
||
|
// "wrapped" around some simpler type, for instance a pointer to a class. The
|
||
|
// type will be either a pointer or a const wrapper--it cannot be a
|
||
|
// combination of these. (When combinations are required, they use multiple
|
||
|
// wrappers. A const char pointer, for example, is represented as a pointer
|
||
|
// wrapper around a const wrapper around an atomic char.)
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_wrapped(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_pointer(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_const(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_typedef(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_type_wrapped_type(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// If interrogate_type_is_enum() returns true, this is an enumerated type,
|
||
|
// which means it may take any one of a number of named integer values.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_enum(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_type_number_of_enum_values(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_type_enum_value_name(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_type_enum_value_scoped_name(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB const char *interrogate_type_enum_value_comment(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_type_enum_value(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// If none of the above is true, the type is some extension type. It may be a
|
||
|
// struct, class, or union (and the distinction between these three is not
|
||
|
// likely to be important to the scripting language). In any case, it may
|
||
|
// contain zero or more constructors, zero or one destructor, zero or more
|
||
|
// member functions, and zero or more data members; all of the remaining type
|
||
|
// functions may apply.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_struct(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_class(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_union(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// If is_fully_defined() returns false, this classstruct was a forward
|
||
|
// reference, and we really don't know anything about it. (In this case, it
|
||
|
// will appear to have no methods or members.)
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_fully_defined(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// If is_unpublished() returns false, the classstruct is unknown because it
|
||
|
// was not marked to be published (or, in promiscuous mode, it is a protected
|
||
|
// or private nested class).
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_is_unpublished(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
|
||
|
/*
|
||
|
* Otherwise, especially if the type is a struct or class, we may have a
|
||
|
* number of member functions, including zero or more constructors and zero or
|
||
|
* one destructor. A constructor function may be called to allocate a new
|
||
|
* instance of the type; its return value will be a pointer to the new
|
||
|
* instance. The destructor may be called to destroy the instance; however,
|
||
|
* it usually should not be explicitly called by the user, since the proper
|
||
|
* support of the interrogate_caller_manages_return_value() interface, above,
|
||
|
* will ensure that the appropriate destructors are called when they should
|
||
|
* be.
|
||
|
*/
|
||
|
|
||
|
/*
|
||
|
* In certain circumstances, the destructor might be inherited from a parent
|
||
|
* or ancestor class. This happens when the destructor wrapper from the
|
||
|
* ancestor class is an acceptable substitute for this destructor; this is
|
||
|
* only possible in the case of a virtual C++ destructor. In this case, the
|
||
|
* destructor returned here will be the same function index as the one
|
||
|
* returned by the ancestor class, and
|
||
|
* interrogate_type_destructor_is_inherited() will return true for this class.
|
||
|
*/
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_type_number_of_constructors(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionIndex interrogate_type_get_constructor(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_has_destructor(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_destructor_is_inherited(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionIndex interrogate_type_get_destructor(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// This is the set of exposed data elements in the struct or class.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_type_number_of_elements(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB ElementIndex interrogate_type_get_element(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// This is the set of exposed member functions in the struct or class.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_type_number_of_methods(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionIndex interrogate_type_get_method(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// This is the set of MAKE_SEQ wrappers in the struct or class.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_type_number_of_make_seqs(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB MakeSeqIndex interrogate_type_get_make_seq(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// A C++ class may also define a number of explicit cast operators, which
|
||
|
// define how to convert an object of this type to an object of some other
|
||
|
// type (the type can be inferred by the return type of the cast function).
|
||
|
// This is not related to upcast and downcast, defined below.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_type_number_of_casts(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionIndex interrogate_type_get_cast(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// A C++ class may inherit from zero or more base classes. This defines the
|
||
|
// list of base classes for this particular type.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_type_number_of_derivations(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_type_get_derivation(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// For each base class, we might need to define an explicit upcast or downcast
|
||
|
// operation to convert the pointer to the derived class to an appropriate
|
||
|
// pointer to its base class (upcast) or vice-versa (downcast). This is
|
||
|
// particularly true in the presence of multiple inheritance or virtual
|
||
|
// inheritance, in which case you cannot simply use the same pointer as either
|
||
|
// type.
|
||
|
|
||
|
// If interrogate_type_derivation_has_upcast() returns true for a particular
|
||
|
// typederivation combination, you must use the indicated upcast function to
|
||
|
// convert pointers of this type to pointers of the base type before calling
|
||
|
// any of the inherited methods from the base class. If this returns false,
|
||
|
// you may simply use the same pointer as either a derived class pointer or a
|
||
|
// base class pointer without any extra step.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_derivation_has_upcast(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionIndex interrogate_type_get_upcast(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
|
||
|
/*
|
||
|
* Although it is always possible to upcast a pointer to a base class, it is
|
||
|
* not always possible to downcast from a base class to the derived class
|
||
|
* (particularly in the presence of virtual inheritance). If
|
||
|
* interrogate_type_derivation_downcast_is_impossible() returns true, forget
|
||
|
* it. Otherwise, downcasting works the same way as upcasting. (Of course,
|
||
|
* it is the caller's responsibility to guarantee that the pointer actually
|
||
|
* represents an object of the type being downcast to.)
|
||
|
*/
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_derivation_downcast_is_impossible(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB bool interrogate_type_derivation_has_downcast(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB FunctionIndex interrogate_type_get_downcast(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
|
||
|
// A C++ class may also define any number of nested types--classes or enums
|
||
|
// defined within the scope of this class.
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB int interrogate_type_number_of_nested_types(TypeIndex type);
|
||
|
EXPCL_INTERROGATEDB TypeIndex interrogate_type_get_nested_type(TypeIndex type, int n);
|
||
|
|
||
|
#ifdef __cplusplus
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
#endif
|
||
|
|
||
|
#endif
|