I also asked something in my first email and I hope I can confirm it
I tried making a second name - or an "alias" - for [equals~] (using C.2.9 class_addcreator C.2.9 in http://pdstatic.iem.at/externals-HOWTO/pd-externals-HOWTOse8.html ) But it didn't seem to work. I can get [==~] to instantiate as an alias, but only after I first instantiate it as "[equals~]". So, what's the deal, when does this aliasing work? Only if you load it as a library? 2016-04-05 1:19 GMT-03:00 Alexandre Torres Porres <[email protected]>: > Well, I also found this zexy git https://git.iem.at/pd/zexy/ > > not sure how it compiles to objects like ==~ - coz i couldn't compile. But > my colleague, Flavio, checked it out, and seems to have realized about the > trick to compile an object as "==~". We did it and I compiled it for Mac Os > and it is working. > > By the code from the git above as a model, we changed the original code > from: > > > > > > > > *void equals_tilde_setup(void){ equals_class = > class_new(gensym("equals~"),(t_newmethod)equals_new, 0,sizeof(t_equals), 0, > A_GIMME, 0);sic_setup(equals_class, equals_dsp, SIC_FLOATTOSIGNAL);}* > > > To: > > > > > > > > *void setup_0x3d0x3d0x7e(void){equals_class = > class_new(gensym("==~"),(t_newmethod)equals_new, 0,sizeof(t_equals), 0, > A_GIMME, 0);sic_setup(equals_class, equals_dsp, SIC_FLOATTOSIGNAL);}* > > > > *void setup(void){setup_0x3d0x3d0x7e();}* > > > Then the compiled object can be named as ==~ and it loads fine here. > Should I expect that it loads just fine in any other OS as well? > > > cheers >
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