On Thu, May 23, 2002 at 09:11:29AM +0200, Pac wrote: | Le 22/05/02 à 23:54, dman a écrit: | dman> | See this from http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.1/changes.html : | dman> | | dman> | " # JNI and CNI invocation interfaces were implemented, so gcj-compiled Java code can now be called from a C/C++ application. | dman> | dman> I didn't know that. That's a good feature to have. I guess you'll | dman> have to RTFM the gcc docs to find out what that API is. Maybe it | dman> works just like compiling a C++ library except that you'll be missing | dman> the C++ header files (unless it can generate them too). | | on http://gcc.gnu.org/java/docs.html there is no manual | only a FAQ but I will read the different articles.
Read that part of the FAQ again (#6.2) :
http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/java-patches/2001-q2/msg00224.html
:-)
| dman> | dman> For GTK+ you can take a look at
http://java-gnome.sourceforge.net/.
| dman> |
| dman> | thank you
| dman> | I will read this
| dman>
| dman> Does your GTK+ app already exist in C/C++? If not, then you can use
|
| no.
|
| dman> java-gnome to write your app in Java and use the java libs directly.
|
| it seems to be a better idea I will probably take this way.
| By the way do you know if a GTK+ component has been made to
| encapsulate a minimal canvas tu use EVAS ?
I don't know what EVAS is, and I'm not sure if GTK+ itself has a
canvas, but I know that GNOME has a canvas widget.
-D
--
"Piracy is not a technological issue. It's a behavior issue."
--Steve Jobs
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