[[Property:title|CECIL interface overview]] [[Property:weight|3]] [[Property:uuid|7d8b4785-6f05-02c9-ba1c-12bad3d4b331]] ==Eiffel basic types== The EIFFEL include files define types for every EIFFEL types: * An Eiffel INTEGER is an ''EIF_INTEGER'', * An Eiffel CHARACTER is an ''EIF_CHARACTER'', * An Eiffel REAL is an ''EIF_REAL'', * An Eiffel DOUBLE is an ''EIF_DOUBLE'', * Eiffel references (any Eiffel objects that are not from a basic type) are ''EIF_REFERENCE'' (not protected, and can be moved), * An Eiffel POINTER is an ''EIF_POINTER,'' * An Eiffel BOOLEAN is an ''EIF_BOOLEAN'', * A Protected Eiffel object is an ''EIF_OBJECT'' (does not move, and should be accessed through eif_access. ). Generally, you should use these types when implementing external C functions bound to be used from Eiffel or when you want to manipulate Eiffel objects from the C side. EIF_REFERENCE, EIF_OBJECT, EIF_POINTER all correspond in C to a (char *), but their semantic remains different in Eiffel. {{note|In the following code samples, the class OBJECT is a placeholder for one of your type that you wish to use via CECIL.}} {{sample|Calling C external `foo` from Eiffel, which takes a pointer and an eiffel object of type OBJECT as arguments and returns an INTEGER. }} c_foo (ptr: POINTER; obj: OBJECT): INTEGER external "C | %"your_file.h%"" alias "foo" end In the C side, The C function `foo` is defined as follow: EIF_INTEGER foo (EIF_POINTER ptr, EIF_OBJECT obj) { /* some code */ } In some cases, you may not be able to change the signature of a C function you want to use. In this case, you must describe its actual signature in the Eiffel code. On the C side, foo is already defined as below: int foo (void *arg1, char c, FILE *file) { /* some code */ } To match the signature, you must declare it in Eiffel as: c_foo (arg1: POINTER; c: CHARACTER; file: POINTER): INTEGER external "C (void *, char, FILE *) : int | %""your_file.h%"" alias "foo" end Not doing this would generally produce warnings during the C compilation, and it could crash with some C compilers. To perform the conversion, here is the actual Eiffel types mapping to C types: * POINTER is compatible with any C pointer ( ''char *''). * INTEGER is a long. * CHARACTER is an ''unsigned char''. * DOUBLE is a ''double''. * REAL is a ''float''. * BOOLEAN is an ''unsigned char (EIF_TRUE = '\01', EIF_FALSE = '\0')'' . These are the current correspondences but they may change. The definition of each Eiffel type is located in `$ISE_EIFFEL/bench/spec/$PLATFORM/include/eif_portable.h` . ===More about EIF_OBJECT, EIF_REFERENCE, and basic expanded types=== It is sometimes difficult to tell the difference between an ''EIF_OBJECT'' and an ''EIF_REFERENCE''. An ''EIF_REFERENCE'' is an Eiffel reference. It corresponds to an Eiffel object in the Eiffel side. eif_attribute, eif_reference_function, eif_string, eif_wean all return ''EIF_REFERENCEs''. An ''EIF_REFERENCE'' can be used "as is" by the Eiffel run-time. eif_attribute, eif_xx_function take ''EIF_REFERENCEs'' as arguments, never ''EIF_OBJECTs''. The return value of a C external is to be an ''EIF_REFERENCE'', if it is not a basic expanded type. To protect an ''EIF_REFERENCE'', use eif_protect. An ''EIF_OBJECT'' is a safe and static indirection to an Eiffel reference. As the GC may move an Eiffel reference, this indirection is updated at every collection so that you do not need to know whether an Eiffel reference has moved or not. You must pass through this indirection to access the Eiffel reference (see eif_access). Not doing so is completely unsafe since an Eiffel reference may be obsolete after a collection. eif_create, eif_adopt, and eif_protect returns an ''EIF_OBJECT''. The argument of a C external (on the C side) , which is not a basic expanded type, is also an ''EIF_OBJECT''. The Eiffel run-time temporarily protects the Eiffel objects that are passed to a C external , that is why the signature of a C external has no ''EIF_REFERENCE'' in it, but ''EIF_OBJECT'' instead. After the C external call, the run-time unprotects the Eiffel object. If you intend to use in the C side an ''EIF_OBJECT'' given by a C external afterwards, you must protect it with eif_adopt. To unprotect an ''EIF_OBJECT'' , which is not a C external argument, use eif_wean. The basic expanded types are INTEGER, INTEGER_64, INTEGER_16, INTEGER_8, REAL, DOUBLE, CHARACTER, BOOLEAN, POINTER. They are passed to C externals by values. There is no need to protect instances of these types. When the POINTER is a pointer to an Eiffel object (ex: $my_object), then the direct Eiffel reference is passed to C, with no protection and this reference may move. Use eif_protect to manually protect it. To unprotect it, call eif_wean. ==Protecting the Eiffel objects== You can use the CECIL functions directly from a C program as well as from a C external called from Eiffel. If you encounter problems, they may be related to the handling of garbage collection. The programmer who uses CECIL has to be aware that all Eiffel objects can be moved or collected asynchronously by the Garbage Collector (GC). The cecil library provides the user with numerous macros and functions, which relieve the programmer from these kinds of low-level considerations (most of them are declared in $ISE_EIFFEL/bench/spec/$PLATFORM/include/eif_cecil. h). ===Eiffel objects passed in a C external=== An Eiffel object which is passed as an argument of a C external is automatically protected: the value passed to C is not a direct Eiffel reference. In fact, it is a temporary indirection pointer, which is only valid until the C external returned. This indirection pointer is to be used to access the direct reference of the Eiffel object with ''eif_access (eiffel_object)'' where ''eiffel_object'' is the argument (an ''EIF_OBJECT)'' of the C external which corresponds to the Eiffel object. Only Eiffel objects passed to C is automatically protected. This excludes basic expanded types, since they cannot be moved. ===Accessing the direct reference to an Eiffel object: eif_access=== '''# include "eif_hector. h"''' '''EIF_REFERENCE eif_access (EIF_OBJECT object) /* Macro */''' The GC moves the objects every time it runs a collection cycle. A collection cycle can only occur during an Eiffel call. This includes calls to Eiffel routines and calls to CECIL functions (other than ''eif_access''). Thus, it may be unsafe to access a "raw" reference to an Eiffel object, (of type ''EIF_REFERENCE'') "as is", since the latter can be obsolete after each collection. To avoid this, you must access a direct reference through a "protection", which is a safe, non-moving pointer (of type ''EIF_OBJECT''). Call the macro ''eif_access'' as follows: ''eif_access (protection)'' , where ''protection'' is either a value returned by eif_create, eif_adopt or eif_protect, or an Eiffel object which is an argument of a C external. Use ''eif_access'' to pass an Eiffel object to an Eiffel routine or to return the value of a C external. It is also unsafe to pass a direct Eiffel reference ( ''EIF_REFERENCE'') to a C function which is not an Eiffel routine. Pass a protected indirection instead ( ''EIF_OBJECT''). However, if you still intend to pass a direct reference, be very careful and make sure that you do not perform any Eiffel call after passing the reference to the C function and before reading it. '''For example, in the following external:''' c_foo (ptr: POINTER; obj: OBJECT): INTEGER external "C | %""your_file.h%"" alias "foo" end the Eiffel run-time will protect obj, which can asynchronously move, and give a static and safe indirection to C. '''Here is an example of how accessing obj: OBJECT:''' EIF_INTEGER foo (EIF_POINTER ptr, EIF_OBJECT obj); { /* Print the Eiffel object `obj', with the feature `print' * from ANY. (do not forget to put `visible' the class * ANY in the project configuration file. */ EIF_PROCEDURE ep; EIF_TYPE_ID tid; tid = eif_type_id ("ANY"); ep = eif_procedure ("print", tid); (ep) (eif_access(obj),eif_access(obj)); } '''Important rules when using eif_access:''' {{note|The first argument of ''(ep)'' is the target of the function (the eiffel object to which you want to apply the Eiffel feature ''(ep)'') and the second argument corresponds to the first argument of `print`. Any Eiffel object could have been the 1st argument of ''(ep)'' since all of them inherit ''ANY''. }} * '''Never pre compute the value returned by eif_access. '''
'''Example:'''
Example:
Instead of the code above, it would have been dangerous to write: EIF_REFERENCE e_ref = eif_access (obj); ... (ep) (e_ref, e_ref); because e_ref is the direct reference to the Eiffel object when calling ''eif_access(). '' There is not guarantee that it will still be valid when the call to ''(ep)'' is done: meanwhile, e_ref may have been moved by the GC.
* '''Never use eif_access with encapsulated eiffel calls:'''
(eif_access in not an eiffel call) '''Example:''' (ep) (eif_access (a), eif_string ("Hello world")); /* eif_string is a macro returning a direct reference to an Eiffel string, * which corresponds to the C string passed as its argument. */ Nothing guarantees that the direct reference returned by `eif_access (a)` will be still valid when executing (ep): it may be obsolete after the Eiffel call eif_string ("Hello world"), which may invoke a collection cycle. The correct code is EIF_REFERENCE my_string; /* some code */ my_string = eif_string ("Hello world"); (ep) (eif_access (a), my_string); In this case, you do not need to protect `my_string` since the GC is not likely to be triggered after the call to ''eif_string'' and before `my_string` is given as argument in ''(ep). '' A collection is triggered only during Eiffel calls. If an Eiffel call had been performed, you would have had to use ''eif_protect'' (see paragraph 3. 2): EIF_REFERENCE my_string; EIF_OBJECT i_my_string; /* some code */ my_string = eif_string ("Hello world"); i_my_string = eif_protect (my_string); /* Protect `my_string'. */ /* Some eiffel calls */ (ep) (eif_access (a), eif_access (i_my_string)); eif_wean (i_my_string); /* Release protection. */ ===Keeping a reference from C after an external call: eif_adopt=== '''# include "eif_hector. h"''' EIF_OBJECT eif_adopt (EIF_OBJECT object) When passing Eiffel objects to C, you may need to keep a reference to them after the C external is called. Since the Eiffel run-time automatically will unprotect the Eiffel object references passed to a C external after execution, if one of the Eiffel objects is not referenced any longer from Eiffel, then the garbage collector will collect it because it is not aware that you may still need to reference this object from the C side. Called within a C external, the function ''eif_adopt'' creates a user protection for the Eiffel object ''object'' passed to C ( ''object'' is a C external argument). This way, the GC cannot collect the Eiffel reference returned by ''eif_access(object)'' when the C external returned. It tells the GC to keep artificially a reference to this Eiffel reference from C. It returns the new indirection pointer (say ''returned_value'') that must be used afterwards to access this direct Eiffel reference with ''eif_access (return_value)''. It is important to note that ''eif_adopt'' already takes an indirection pointer as unique argument. This is a temporary protection pointer: you can access the direct Eiffel reference with ''eif_access (object)'' only within the code of the C external. When the C external returns, ''eif_access (object)'' is NULL but ''eif_access (returned_value)'' remains valid until you release it with eif_wean. '''Example:''' In Eiffel: c_foo (ptr: POINTER; obj: OBJECT): INTEGER external "C | %"your_file.h%"" alias "foo" end c_display_and_release_obj external "C | %"your_file.h%"" alias "display_and_release_obj" end On the C side: EIF_OBJECT my_obj; /* Protection of the object of type OBJECT. */ EIF_INTEGER foo (EIF_POINTER ptr, EIF_OBJECT obj) { my_obj = eif_adopt (obj); /* Keeping a reference on it for * for later use. */ /* some code */ } void display_and_release_obj (void) { /* Display global object. */ EIF_PROCEDURE ep; EIF_TYPE_ID tid; tid = eif_type_id ("OBJECT"); ep = eif_procedure ("print", tid); (ep) (eif_access(my_obj),eif_access(my_obj)); /* Print global object.*/ eif_wean (my_obj); /* Remove the protection on global object.*/ } Between the call of `c_foo` and `c_display_obj`, the global object `(eif_access (my_obj))` may not be referenced from Eiffel any longer. To prevent the GC from collecting it before the call to `c_display_and_release_obj`, you must protect it with `eif_adopt` in the C function `foo`. ==Other CECIL functions:== ===Creating Eiffel objects from C: eif_create=== ''' # include "eif_cecil. h"''' EIF_OBJECT eif_create (EIF_TYPE_ID type_id) All CECIL calls are not completed using C externals. It is possible to create and manipulate Eiffel objects from a C program and still reap benefits from the garbage collector and design by contract methodology provided by Eiffel (see also [[Compiling an Eiffel system for CECIL|How to run a CECIL program]] ). This function does not call any creation procedure. The CECIL function ''eif_create'' takes a type identifier ''type_id'' as argument (generally returned by eif_type_id). It returns a static indirection pointer which is to be used afterwards to access the newly created Eiffel object with ''eif_access (returned_value)'' where ''returned_value'' is the value returned by ''eif_create'' . This means that when creating an eiffel object from C, the eiffel object is automatically protected: there is no need to call eif_adopt or eif_protect on it. This function does not call any creation procedure. To do so, you need to explicitly call it with eif_procedure. The garbage collector will not collect the newly created object until you call eif_wean on it. '''Example:''' Creating an object of type "OBJECT": #include eif_setup.h" /* for EIF_INITIALIZE and EIF_DISPOSE_ALL */ #include "eif_eiffel.h" /* for other exported routines from the Eiffel run-time */ main (int argc,char **argv,char **envp) { EIF_TYPE_ID tid; EIF_OBJECT my_obj; EIF_INITIALIZE(failure) /* Initialization of Eiffel run-time. * This is to be done before any CECIL call. */ tid = eif_type_id ("OBJECT"); if (tid == EIF_NO_TYPE) eif_panic ("No type id."); my_obj = eif_create (tid); /* Create eiffel object, returns an indirection. */ /* some code */ eif_wean (my_obj); /* We do not need it any more. */ EIF_DISPOSE_ALL /* Reclaim memory allocated by Eiffel run-time. */ } {{note|`eif_create` does not call any creation procedure. It just allocates memory and initializes an object. }} ===Protecting the objects returned by Eiffel functions.=== '''# include "eif_hector. h"''' ''' EIF_OBJECT eif_protect (EIF_REFERENCE object)''' This function is used to tell explicitly the GC that you want to keep a reference to an eiffel object from the C. It returns a static indirection pointer which is to be used afterwards to access the direct Eiffel reference object with eif_access (returned_value) where returned_value is the value returned by eif_protect . With this call, the GC artificially references object, so that it cannot collect it. It is unsafe to access directly (i.e without using eif_access) the Eiffel reference object, which may be obsolete after any collection cycle (the GC moves the objects). Ignore this rule, if you are sure that there is no Eiffel call after you pass the direct Eiffel reference to a C function and before you read it. To release this artificial reference, call eif_wean (returned_value) eif_protect is to be called on an EIF_REFERENCE returned by eif_attribute, eif_string, or the returned value of eif_reference_function. See also eif_adopt, eif_create, eif_wean, eif_access. '''Example:''' Assume that you want to access an attribute `tab` of type ARRAY [INTEGER] in the class OBJECT. #include eif_setup.h" #include "eif_eiffel.h" main (int argc,char **argv,char **envp) { EIF_TYPE_ID tid; EIF_OBJECT my_obj; EIF_PROCEDURE emake; /* Creation procedure of "OBJECT". */ EIF_REFERENCE tab; /* direct reference to `tab' from "OBJECT". */ EIF_OBJECT i_tab; /* Protected indirection to `tab'. */ EIF_INITIALIZE(failure) tid = eif_type_id ("OBJECT"); if (tid == EIF_NO_TYPE) eif_panic ("No type Id."); my_obj = eif_create (tid); emake = eif_procedure ("make", tid); /* On the eiffel side: make is do ... end.. */ (emake) (eif_access (my_obj)); /* Call `make' on `eif_access(my_obj)'.*/ tab = eif_attribute( eif_access (my_obj), "tab", EIF_REFERENCE, NULL); /* Return the attribute `tab' of type EIF_REFERENCE * of the object `eif_access (my_obj)'. */ i_tab = eif_protect (tab); /* Here, protect `tab'. */ /* some code */ eif_wean (my_obj); eif_wean (i_tab); /* We do not need it any more. */ EIF_DISPOSE_ALL /* Reclaim memory allocated by Eiffel run-time. */ } {{note|Although you must protect Eiffel references returned by eif_attribute, you do not have to protect attributes of basic types - they are not Eiffel references and not supposed to move. }} ===Getting the type id of an Eiffel type: eif_type_id=== '''# include "eif_gen_conf. h"''' # include "eif_gen_conf. h" EIF_TYPE_ID eif_type_id (char *type_string) Return the type identifier corresponding to the type described in type_string. If the type does not exist, is not visible or an instance of it is not declared in the root class, it returns EIF_NO_TYPE. COMPATIBILITY: eif_type_id is equivalent to eif_type_by_name. '''Example:''' type_id of STD_FILES so as to call 'put_string'. EIF_PROCEDURE p_put_string; /* 'put_string' from STD_FILES. */ EIF_TYPE_ID tid; EIF_REFERENCE_FUNCTION fn_io; /* once function `io' from ANY (and STD_FILES by inheritance). */ EIF_REFERENCE o_io; /* Eiffel object `io' returned by once function*/ EIF_REFERENCE o_str; /* Eiffel string */ EIF_OBJECT i_io, i_str; /* safe indirection pointers to ``io' and Eiffel string. */ tid = eif_type_id ("STD_FILES"); if (tid == EIF_NO_TYPE) eif_panic ("Type not in system."); fn_io = eif_reference_function ("io", tid); o_io = (fn_io) (root_obj); /* `root_obj' is the root object of the CECIL system * automatically initialized in EIF_INITIALIZED * if it does not exists */ i_io = eif_protect (o_io); /* Protect `io' . */ o_str = eif_string ("Hello World"); /* Create Eiffel string */ i_str = eif_protect (o_str); /* Protect Eiffel string. */ p_put_string = eif_procedure ("put_string", tid); if (p_put_string == (EIF_PROCEDURE) 0) /* No routine found. */ eif_panic ("put_string not visible"); /* Raised if "visible exception" disabled. */ (p_put_string) (eif_access (i_io), eif_access (i_str)); eif_type_id is also used for returning the type identifier of generic types but you need to specify the generic parameter, otherwise it returns EIF_NO_TYPE. '''Example:''' EIF_PROCEDURE p_make; /* 'make' from ARRAY [INTEGER] . */ EIF_TYPE_ID tid; tid = eif_type_id ("ARRAY[INTEGER]"); p_make = eif_procedure ("make", tid); ===Getting the type id of a generic type : eif_generic_type.=== Obsolete: see eif_type_id. ===Raising an eiffel panic: eif_panic.=== ''' # include "eif_except. h"''' void eif_panic(char *msg) # include "eif_threads. h" void eif_thr_panic (char *msg) Raise an Eiffel panic with Eiffel exception trace with message msg. In MT mode, use eif_thr_panic instead. ===Releasing an Eiffel indirection pointer: eif_wean=== '''# include "eif_hector. h"''' EIF_REFERENCE eif_wean(EIF_OBJECT object) Tell the GC to remove the artificial reference to the nested Eiffel reference returned by eif_access (object). Then, the GC will be able to collect this nested object, as soon as it is not referenced from Eiffel any longer. {{note|Object must have been previously created with eif_adopt, eif_protect or eif_create. }} eif_wean (object) returns an Eiffel reference, which corresponds to eif_access (object). After a call to eif_wean (object), eif_access (object) is NULL, which does not mean that the nested Eiffel object is Void, but that the indirection pointer does not reference it any longer. It is possible to reuse object later on.
Calling eif_wean (external_argument) where external_argument is an Eiffel object given by a C external can cause erratic behaviors. Indeed, external_argument is an indirection pointer, which is automatically deleted after the external call (not the nested Eiffel object), deleting it prematurely can corrupt the indirection pointers stack.
See also eif_access. '''Example:''' C external returning an Eiffel string. In Eiffel: foo : STRING external "C | %"a file.h%"" end In C: EIF_REFERENCE foo () { EIF_REFERENCE str; EIF_OBJECT i_str; str = eif_string ("Hello world"); i_str = eif_protect(str); /* Some operations on `i_str' */ return eif_wean (i_str); /* Returns direct reference to the Eiffel string. * No need to keep an extra reference from the C. */ } ===Getting the attribute from an Eiffel object: eif_attribute=== ``` # include "eif_cecil. h" EIFFEL_TYPE eif_attribute (EIF_REFERENCE object, char *name, EIFFEL_TYPE, int *status) ``` Return the attribute of an Eiffel object. The `eif_attribute` macro returns the attribute of object of name, which is of type EIFFEL_TYPE. EIFFEL_TYPE is the type of the Eiffel attribute. It can be: EIF_INTEGER, EIF_POINTER, EIF_CHARACTER, EIF_BOOLEAN, EIF_DOUBLE, EIF_REAL or EIF_REFERENCE. If status is NULL then no status is set. Otherwise the status of the function is put in *status: *status = EIF_NO_ATTRIBUTE => no attribute found. *status = EIF_CECIL_OK => attribute found. *status = EIF_CECIL_ERROR => an undefined error occurred, object may be invalid. If the visible exception is enabled, then a visible exception is raised upon failure (EIF_NO_ATTRIBUTE, EIF_CECIL_ERROR). RETURN VALUE: Upon failure, it returns (EIFFEL_TYPE) 0, otherwise, the attribute is returned. If the return value is not a basic type, you must protect it with eif_protect. COMPATIBILITY: `eif_attribute (object, name, type, NULL)` is equivalent to `eif_field (object, name, type)`. {{tip|You cannot access a constant attribute, or the result of a function (once or not) with eif_attribute. Use eif_procedure or eif_xx_function instead. }}
{{tip|EIF_BOOLEAN attribute_exists (EIF_REFERENCE object, char *name) returns EIF_TRUE or EIF_FALSE depending if the attribute exists or not, is visible or not. }} ===Getting the address of an Eiffel routine=== ``` #include "eif_cecil. h" EIF_PROCEDURE eif_procedure (char *rout_name, EIF_TYPE_ID type_id) EIF_REFERENCE_FUNCTION eif_reference_function (char *rout_name, EIF_TYPE_ID type_id) EIF_INTEGER_FUNCTION eif_integer_function (char *rout_name, EIF_TYPE_ID type_id) EIF_CHARACTER_FUNCTION eif_character_function (char *rout_name, EIF_TYPE_ID type_id) EIF_REAL_FUNCTION eif_real_function (char *rout_name, EIF_TYPE_ID type_id) EIF_DOUBLE_FUNCTION eif_double_function (char *rput_name, EIF_TYPE_ID type_id) EIF_BIT_FUNCTION eif_bit_function (char *rout_name, EIF_TYPE_ID type_id) EIF_BOOLEAN_FUNCTION eif_boolean_function (char *rout_name, EIF_TYPE_ID type_id) EIF_POINTER_FUNCTION eif_pointer_function (char *rout_name, EIF_TYPE_ID type_id) ``` Return the address of the Eiffel routine by giving its name rout_name and the type id type_id of the class, in which it is declared. Returns a NULL pointer or raises a visible exception (if enabled) when there is no corresponding routine with name rout_name or the routine is not visible. The first argument of an Eiffel routine has to be the target of the Eiffel routine. The Eiffel object returned by an Eiffel function must be protected afterwards with `eif_protect` (this only applies for functions whose addresses are returned by `eif_reference_function`, since the other function types returns basic types, which are not Eiffel objects). {{note|The address returned by these functions must be called between parenthesis. }} {{caution|Be sure that the Eiffel routine is not a C External. In this case, you should call directly the C external instead of its Eiffel wrapper. }} ===Enabling/Disabling the visible exception=== ``` #include "eif_cecil. h" void eif_enable_visible_exception () void eif_disable_visible_exception () ``` Respectively, enable and disable the visible exception. By default, the visible exception is disabled (since v4. 5). ===Creating an Eiffel string: eif_string=== ``` #include "eif_plug. h" EIF_REFERENCE eif_string (char *string) /* Macro */ ``` Return the direct reference to an Eiffel string by giving the corresponding C string . The result of eif_string does not reference the C string passed as argument: it copies it, before creating the Eiffel string. {{note|The return value must be protected with eif_protect for later use.
The C string must be manually freed by the user, if it has been dynamically allocated. }} COMPATIBILITY: `eif_string ("ABC")` is equivalent to `RTMS ("ABC")` and `eif_make_string ("ABC", strlen ("ABC"))`. ===Getting the return-type of an attribute: eif_attribute_type=== ``` #include "eif_cecil. h" int eif_attribute_type (char *attr_name, EIF_TYPE_ID tid) #define EIF_REFERENCE_TYPE 1 #define EIF_CHARACTER_TYPE 2 #define EIF_BOOLEAN_TYPE 3 #define EIF_INTEGER_TYPE 4 #define EIF_REAL_TYPE 5 #define EIF_DOUBLE_TYPE 6 #define EIF_EXPANDED_TYPE 7 #define EIF_BIT_TYPE 8 #define EIF_POINTER_TYPE 0 #define EIF_NO_TYPE (-1) ``` Return the type of the attribute described by its name attr_name and the type identifier tid of the class where it is defined. The return type is an int (see above for correspondences). In case of failure, EIF_NO_TYPE is returned - not such given attribute name, routine name instead of attribute name, or so on. '''Example:''' Get the type of count from STRING int i; i = eif_attribute_type ("count", eif_type_id ("STRING"); printf ("type is %d\n"); /* Should be EIF_INTEGER_TYPE since it returns an Eiffel Integer */ {{tip|*(EIFFEL_TYPE *) eif_attribute_safe (EIF_REFERENCE object, char *name, int type_int, int *status) can be used for debugging or type checking. It returns the attribute reference of name from the object of type type_int. status contains the status of the function call: it can be EIF_CECIL_OK, EIF_CECIL_ERROR, EIF_NO_ATTRIBUTE or EIF_WRONG_TYPE (type_int does not match with real type of object). }} ===Getting the class name corresponding to a type id: eif_name=== ``` #include "eif_cecil. h" char *eif_name (EIF_TYPE_ID tid) ``` Return the corresponding name (C string) of the Eiffel class, given a type identifier type_id. If the type identifier is a generic type identifier, no generic parameter type is given. Return NULL if an invalid type identifier is given. '''Example:''' `printf ("the class name with type id 1 is %s\n", eif_name (1); /* Should print "ANY" on most compiler versions */` COMPATIBILITY: `eif_name` is equivalent to `eif_name_by_tid`. ===Getting the type id of an Eiffel object: eif_type, eif_type_by_reference.=== ``` #include "eif_cecil. h" EIF_TYPE_ID eif_type (EIF_OBJECT object) EIF_TYPE_ID eif_type_by_reference (EIF_REFERENCE reference) ``` `eif_type` returns the type identifier, given an indirection pointer to an Eiffel object. `eif_type_by_reference` returns the type identifier, given the direct reference to an Eiffel object reference. COMPATIBILITY: `eif_type` is equivalent to `eif_type_by_object.eif_type (object)` is equivalent to `eif_type_by_reference (eif_access (object))`. ===Converting a C array into an Eiffel array: eif_make_from_c.=== ``` eif_make_from_c(eif_array, c_array, int nelts, int type) /* Macro */ ``` (since 4. 5) `eif_array` is an `EIF_REFERENCE`, `c_array` is a C array of type `(type *)`, `nelts is the number of elements in the array.