Alex,
I’ve worked on a few wrapper libraries, so I have some experience with this.
In your Obj-C wrapper, you would need to create the NSString yourself. So, if
you have a C function:
char* MyCFunc(void);
The Objective-C wrapper method would do something like:
- (void) myObjcMethod
{
char* cStr = MyCFunc();
NSString* objcStr = [[NSString alloc] initWithUTF8String:cStr];
return objCStr;
}
Depending on the C function implementation, you might have to deal with
releasing the C string in your wrapper. Also, I assume UTF-8 encoding, which
may or may not be true.
Hopefully this helps you.
Doug Hill
> On Mar 4, 2016, at 12:07 PM, Alex Zavatone <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> I'm in the middle of some fun where there is a wrapper class to a lib that's
> written in C and the c function has a char string that I'd like to return
> back to or somehow pass on to an Cbjective-C class.
>
> I'm sure there is an established practice for performing this type of task,
> but while I have the opportunity to do this, I'd like to start be learning
> the right way to handle this operation.
>
> I've seen really poor use of a catch all delegate for this approach, but am
> pretty unsure on viable and safe methods to handle this.
>
> Any tips to how to handle this?
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> Alex Zavatone
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