1.5 KiB
C Interoperability
Tomo is intended to be used as a complete, standalone programming language, but it's also meant to be easy to integrate with existing C libraries. In order to make this possible, there are a few tools available.
Using C Libraries
In order to link against a compiled shared library, you can use use -lfoo
to
cause Tomo to add -lfoo
to the linker flags when compiling your final
executable. You can also use use <foo.h>
or use ./foo.h
to cause Tomo to
insert a corresponding #include
when compiling your code.
You can also use ./foo.c
or use ./foo.S
to use C or assembly source files
from inside a Tomo source file.
Inline C Code
As a final escape hatch, you can use inline C
to add code that will be put,
verbatim in the transpiled C code generated by Tomo. There are two forms: one
that creates an expression value and one that creates a block that is executed
without evaluating to anything:
# Inline C block:
inline C {
printf("This is just a block that is executed without a return value\n");
}
# Inline C expression (you must specify a type)
val := inline C : Int32 {
int x = 1; x + 1
}
Inline C expressions must specify a type and they can be compound statement
expressions. In
other words, if an inline C expression has a type, it will be enclosed
with ({ ...; })
so that you can put semicolon-terminated statements before
the final expression in their own scope if you want.