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SWIG Perl5 Examples

This directory contains a variety of simple examples for Perl5.
These are primarily intended to illustrate SWIG concepts as
opposed to being particularly "useful".

simple      - The simple example from the user manual.

except      - Shows how you can turn C++ exceptions into Perl exceptions.

tree        - Binary search trees in Perl5.

SWIGtoXS    - Shows how pointers can be passed between
              an xsubpp generated wrapper and a SWIG generated
              wrapper.

c++         - An example showing how to create a C++ module for Perl.

shadow      - A example showing how to use Perl5 shadow classes

defarg      - Use default arguments with C/C++ functions

multinherit - Wrapping of C++ multiple inheritance

typemaps    - Various examples using SWIG's typemap mechanism.

nested      - Shows how nested structures can be used.

graph       - Example from the User manual.

filedialog  - Pops up Windows file dialogs from Perl (Win 95/NT only)

Unix Instructions
-----------------
All of these examples have been compiled and successfully tested with
Perl5.003 and Perl5.004. In order to compile, you may need to edit the
file 'Makefile.template' in the top-level directory so that it can
find your Perl5 header files and libraries.  There are sometimes
compilation problems with building both C and C++ Perl extensions.
See the file 'TROUBLESHOOTING' for more details.

To build each example, go to that directory and type 'make'.  This
will run SWIG, and compile a dynamically loadable Perl module.  If
dynamic loading is not supported on your machine, typing 'make static'
will rebuild the Perl interpreter called 'myperl' that you should run
to test the example.

Windows NT Instructions
-----------------------
Most of the examples have been tested using the ActiveWare Perl for
Win32 Build 303 (Perl 5.003_07). Some examples will not compile due to
Unix dependencies and/or runtime problems under NT.  All of the
examples rely on the file 'Makefile.win' in the SWIG top level
directory and should be built from the command prompt.  To do this,
edit the file 'Makefile.win' to point to your installation of Visual
C++, Perl, and other libraries.  Now to build each example, go into
the appropriate example and type 'nmake /f makefile.msc perl'.  This
will build a DLL that you can load into perl.  To run, simply type
'perl file.pl' where 'file.pl' is any one of the '.pl' files in the
example directories.

1/4/98  : A Makefile for Borland C++ 5.x has been written, but is untested.

6/22/97 : SWIG has now been tested with Perl5.004 for NT and it
appears to work.

Disclaimer : SWIG support for NT is new.  Please report build and/or
runtime problems to beazley@cs.utah.edu.   I'm also looking for
makefiles to build the examples under different compilers.


---- Most Recent Testing Information ---

Date checked : January 3, 1998
Versions     : Perl 5.003
OS           : Linux 2.0.27
            
Date checked : June 22, 1997
Versions     : Perl 5.003, Perl5.004
OS           : Linux 2.0.27, Irix 6.2, MkLinux DR2.1
               Windows NT 4.0.