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added the first C exercise

This commit is contained in:
Chris Boesch 2023-02-15 22:55:44 +01:00
parent e88bc2ae87
commit 7a646ddf09
3 changed files with 87 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -31,6 +31,10 @@ const Exercise = struct {
/// We need to keep track of this, so we compile without the self hosted compiler
@"async": bool = false,
/// This exercise makes use of C functions
/// We need to keep track of this, so we compile with libc
C: bool = false,
/// Returns the name of the main file with .zig stripped.
pub fn baseName(self: Exercise) []const u8 {
assert(std.mem.endsWith(u8, self.main_file, ".zig"));
@ -461,6 +465,11 @@ const exercises = [_]Exercise{
// .output = "ABCDEF",
// .@"async" = true,
// },
.{
.main_file = "093_hello_c.zig",
.output = "Hello C from Zig! - C result ist 17 chars",
.C = true,
},
.{
.main_file = "999_the_end.zig",
.output = "\nThis is the end for now!\nWe hope you had fun and were able to learn a lot, so visit us again when the next exercises are available.",
@ -725,6 +734,11 @@ const ZiglingStep = struct {
// zig_args.append("-fstage1") catch unreachable;
// }
// Enable C support for exercises that use C functions
if (self.exercise.C) {
zig_args.append("-lc") catch unreachable;
}
if (builder.color != .auto) {
zig_args.append("--color") catch unreachable;
zig_args.append(@tagName(builder.color)) catch unreachable;

69
exercises/093_hello_c.zig Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,69 @@
//
// When Andrew Kelley announced the idea of a new programming language
// - namely Zig - in his blog on February 8, 2016, he also immediately
// stated his ambitious goal: to replace the C language!
//
// In order to be able to achieve this goal at all, Zig should be
// as compatible as possible with its "predecessor".
// Only if it is possible to exchange individual modules in existing
// C programs without having to use complicated wrappers,
// the undertaking has a chance of success.
//
// So it is not surprising that calling C functions and vice versa
// is extremely "smooth".
//
// To call C functions in Zig, you only need to specify the library
// that contains said function. For this purpose there is a built-in
// function corresponding to the well-known @import():
//
// @cImport()
//
// All required libraries can now be included in the usual Zig notation:
//
// const c = @cImport({
// @cInclude("stdio.h");
// @cInclude("...");
// });
//
// Now a function can be called via the (in this example) constant 'c':
//
// c.puts("Hello world!");
//
// By the way, most C functions have return values in the form of an
// integer value. Errors can then be evaluated (return < 0) or other
// information can be obtained. For example, 'puts' returns the number
// of characters output.
//
// So that all this does not remain a dry theroy now, let's just start
// and call a C function out of Zig.
//
// our well-known "import" for Zig
const std = @import("std");
// new the import for C
const c = @cImport({
// we use "standard input/output" from C
@cInclude("stdio.h");
});
pub fn main() void {
// In order to output a text that can be evaluated by the
// Zig Builder, we need to write it to the Error output.
// In Zig we do this with "std.debug.print" and in C we can
// specify the file to write to, i.e. "standard error (stderr)".
//
// Ups, something is wrong...
const c_res = fprintf(c.stderr, "Hello C from Zig!");
// let's see what the result from C is:
std.debug.print(" - C result ist {d} chars\n", .{c_res});
}
//
// Something must be considered when compiling with C functions.
// Namely that the Zig compiler knows that it should include
// corresponding libraries. For this purpose we call the compiler
// with the parameter "lc" for such a program,
// e.g. "zig run -lc hello_c.zig".
//

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@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
58c58
< const c_res = fprintf(c.stderr, "Hello C from Zig!");
---
> const c_res = c.fprintf(c.stderr, "Hello C from Zig!");