Hi Rob,

Thanks for the mail.

Can you let me know is XS better than inline::CPP & XS is maintained or not, as 
you mentioned that Inline::CPP is unmaintained.


Regards,
Rohn

> From: sisyph...@optusnet.com.au
> To: rohitsharm...@hotmail.com; inline@perl.org
> Subject: Re: Inline books Perl & C++
> Date: Wed, 9 Sep 2009 23:06:18 +1000
> 
> 
> Hi,
> 
> I want to learn more about inline with C++, can you provide me some link or 
> bookname by which I can understand inline more.
> 
> I want to do a test automation project with C++ & perl.
> 
> =================================================
> 
> For Inline::C there's 'perldoc Inline::C-Cookbook'.
> Also "Extending and Embedding Perl" by Jenness and Cozens has a section on 
> Inline::C, and contains lots of other info that's relevant to Inline::C.
> 
> For Inline::CPP specifically, I can't think of anything much ... I guess the 
> test scripts in the Inline-CPP-0.25 source distro would be helpful.
> Inline::CPP also suffers from being currently unmaintained.
> And the latest version of Parse::RecDescent doesn't work with it. At least, 
> it won't work for me, and I have to use Parse-RecDescent-1.94.
> 
> Experimentation is probably the way to go - and I think you'll get good help 
> with Inline::CPP issues from the XS mailing list, if you don't get good 
> assistance here. Just set about trying to achieve what you want to do ... 
> and when you get stuck, ask :-)
> 
> Cheers,
> Rob
> 
> Cheers,
> Rob
> 
> 

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