Вставить некоторые данные в функцию вызова Lua
У меня есть два файла - один для выполнения скрипта Lua и сам скрипт.
Вот они:
host.cpp:
#include <lua.hpp>
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int someHandler(lua_State *l)
{
int argc = lua_gettop(l);
for (int i = 0; i < argc; i++)
{
cout << "ARG[" << i + 1 << "] = " << lua_tostring(l, i + 1) << endl;
}
lua_pushstring(l, "m_pi");
//lua_pop(l, argc - 1);
//lua_pushnumber(l, 3.14);
return argc;
}
int main()
{
lua_State *l = lua_open();
luaL_openlibs(l);
lua_register(l, "moo", someHandler);
luaL_dofile(l, "script.lua");
lua_close(l);
return 0;
}
script.lua:
res = moo("hello", "world");
print(moo());
for k, v in res do
print(k.." = "..v);
end
составление host.cpp
с g++ host.cpp -o host.elf -I/usr/include/lua5.1 -llua5.1
,
Результат бега host.elf
является:
ARG[1] = hello
ARG[2] = world
<\n>
пока должно быть:
ARG[1] = hello
ARG[2] = world
m_pi
Что я делаю не так?
1 ответ
Решение
Построчное объяснение:
--This calls moo with two arguments
--(ignore the assignment for now, we will come back to that)
res = moo("hello", "world");
Управление передается на C++:
//the stack of l looks like this: ["hello", "world"]
int someHandler(lua_State *l)
{
int argc = lua_gettop(l); //int argc = 2;
//This loop prints:
//"ARG[1] = hello\n"
//"ARG[2] = world\n"
for (int i = 0; i < argc; i++)
{
cout << "ARG[" << i + 1 << "] = " << lua_tostring(l, i + 1) << endl;
}
//This pushes "m_pi" on to the stack:
lua_pushstring(l, "m_pi");
//The stack now looks like ["hello", "world", "m_pi"]
//Returns 2.
//Lua will treat this as a function which
//returns the top two elements on the stack (["world", "m_pi"])
return argc;
}
Контроль возвращается в Луа:
--Assigns the first result ("world") to res, discards the other results ("m_pi")
res = moo("hello", "world");
--Calls `moo` with zero arguments.
--This time, `lua_gettop(l)` will evaluate to `0`,
--so the for loop will not be entered,
--and the number of results will be taken to be `0`.
--The string pushed by `lua_pushstring(l, "m_pi")` will be discarded.
--`moo()` returns no results, so `print` prints nothing.
print(moo());
--WTF??: res = "world", which is a string, not an expression which evaluates to
--a loop function, a state variable, and a element variable.
--The for loop will raise in an error when it
--attempts to call a copy of `res` (a string)
for k, v in res do
print(k.." = "..v);
end