Hello, Thank you for taking the time to respond. I am using the S60 port of WebKit,. So the platform is Symbian.
Many thanks, Jack On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 4:56 PM, Darin Adler <da...@apple.com> wrote: > On May 26, 2009, at 8:32 AM, Jack Wootton wrote: > >> 1. I'm attempting to use the JavaScriptCore API to add new JSObjects >> to the JavaScript environment. In order to use the API I include >> "JavaScriptCore.h". However in doing so, JSStringRefCF.h contains >> errors. The system include CoreFoundation/CoreFoundation.h cannot be >> opened. Has anyone had this problem before? > > The JavaScriptCore.h header is a Mac OS X Framework header, and intended for > use only on Mac OS X. > > On other platforms it shouldn't even be installed. You can include the > individual header, or if you want a similar "includes it all" header on some > other platform or for cross-platform code, use JavaScript.h. > >> 2. After a JSObject has been successfully created using the JavaScriptCore >> API, is it correct to use the following method to add it to the JavaScript >> environment: >> >> void Window::put(ExecState* exec, const Identifier& propertyName, JSValue* >> value, int attr) > > No. That is only for internal use within WebCore. You’ll need to get a > JSObjectRef for the window object. How you do that depends on the platform > you're on. Since you don't say what platform you're working on I can't tell > you how to do it. On Mac OS X you would implement the frame load delegate > webView:windowScriptObjectAvailable: method and then call the JSObjectRef > method on the Objective-C object from that method. > > -- Darin > > -- Regards Jack _______________________________________________ webkit-dev mailing list webkit-dev@lists.webkit.org http://lists.webkit.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/webkit-dev