Tizen(Headed) Native API
6.5
|
- Date:
- 2008 (created)
Table of Contents
Introduction
The Eina library is a library which implements an API for data types in an efficient way. It also provides some useful tools like opening shared libraries, error management, type conversion, time accounting and memory pools.
This library is cross-platform and can be compiled and used on Linux, BSD, and Windows.
The data types available are (see Data Types):
- Fp standard floating point numbers.
- Inline Array standard array of inlined members.
- Array standard array of
void*
data. - Hash Table standard hash of
void*
data. - Inline List list with nodes inlined into user type.
- Compact List Compact List.
- List standard list of
void*
data. - Iterator Functions Iterator functions.
- Sparse Matrix sparse matrix of
void*
data. - Red-Black tree red-black tree with nodes inlined into user type.
- String Buffer mutable string to prepend, insert or append strings to a buffer.
- Stringshare saves memory by sharing read-only string references.
- Tiler split, merge and navigates into 2D tiled regions.
- Trash container of unused but allocated data.
- Generic Value Storage container for generic value storage and access.
The tools available are (see Tools):
- Benchmark helper to write benchmarks.
- Convert faster conversion from strings to integers, double, etc.
- Counter measures number of calls and their time.
- Cpu Cpu and architecture related helpers.
- Error error identifiers.
- File simple file list and path split.
- Lazy allocator simple lazy allocator.
- Log full-featured logging system.
- Magic provides runtime type checking.
- Memory Pool abstraction for various memory allocators.
- Module lists, loads and share modules using Eina_Module standard.
- Rectangle rectangle structure and standard manipulation methods.
- Safety Checks extra checks that will report unexpected conditions and can be disabled at compile time.
- String a set of functions that manages C strings.
How to compile
Eina is a library to which your app can link. The procedure for this is very simple. You simply have to compile your application with the appropriate compiler flags as outputted by the pkg-config
script. For example:
Compiling C or C++ files into object files:
gcc -c -o main.o main.c `pkg-config --cflags eina`
Linking object files into a binary executable:
gcc -o my_application main.o `pkg-config --libs eina`
See pkgconfig
Next Steps
After you've understood what Eina is and installed it, you can now learn more about the the programming interface.
Recommended reading:
- Data Types to find about implemented types and how to use them.
- Tools to find about helper tools provided by eina.
Introductory Example
//Compile with: //gcc -g eina_list_01.c -o eina_list_01 `pkg-config --cflags --libs eina` #include <stdio.h> #include <Eina.h> int main(int argc, char **argv) { (void)argc; (void)argv; Eina_List *list = NULL; Eina_List *l; void *list_data; eina_init(); list = eina_list_append(list, "tigh"); list = eina_list_append(list, "adar"); list = eina_list_append(list, "baltar"); list = eina_list_append(list, "roslin"); EINA_LIST_FOREACH(list, l, list_data) printf("%s\n", (char*)list_data); printf("\n"); l = eina_list_nth_list(list, 1); list = eina_list_append_relative_list(list, "cain", l); list = eina_list_append_relative(list, "zarek", "cain"); list = eina_list_prepend(list, "adama"); list = eina_list_prepend_relative(list, "gaeta", "cain"); list = eina_list_prepend_relative_list(list, "lampkin", l); EINA_LIST_FOREACH(list, l, list_data) printf("%s\n", (char*)list_data); eina_list_free(list); eina_shutdown(); return 0; }
More examples can be found at Eina Examples.