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Simple C++11 friendly header-only bindings to Lua

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Selene

Simple C++11 friendly header-only bindings to Lua 5.2+.

Lua logo

Requirements

  • Cmake 2.8+
  • Lua 5.2+
  • C++11 compliant compiler

Usage

Selene is a headers-only library so you just need to include "selene.h" to use this project.

To build the tests, do the following:

mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
make

This will build a test executable that you can run.

Usage

Establishing Lua Context

using namespace sel;
State state; // creates a Lua context
State state{true}; // creates a Lua context and loads standard Lua libraries

When a sel::State object goes out of scope, the Lua context is automatically destroyed in addition to all objects associated with it (including C++ objects).

Accessing elements

-- test.lua
foo = 4
bar = {}
bar[3] = "hi"
bar["key"] = "there"
sel::State state;
state.Load("/path/to/test.lua");
assert(state["foo"] == 4);
assert(state["bar"][3] == "hi");
assert(state["bar"]["key"] == "there");

When the [] operator is invoked on a sel::State object, a sel::Selector object is returned. The Selector is type castable to all the basic types that Lua can return.

If you access the same element frequently, it is recommended that you cache the selector for fast access later like so:

auto bar3 = state["bar"][3]; // bar3 has type sel::Selector
bar3 = 4;
bar3 = 6;
std::cout << int(bar3) << std::endl;

Calling Lua functions from C++

-- test.lua

function foo()
end

function add(a, b)
  return a + b
end

function sum_and_difference(a, b)
  return (a+b), (a-b);
end

function bar()
  return 4, true, "hi"
end

mytable = {}
function mytable.foo()
    return 4
end
sel::State state;
state.Load("/path/to/test.lua");

// Call function with no arguments or returns
state["foo"]();

// Call function with two arguments that returns an int
// The type parameter can be one of int, lua_Number, std::string,
// bool, or unsigned int
int result = state["add"](5, 2);
assert(result == 7);


// Call function that returns multiple values
int sum, difference;
sel::tie(sum, difference) = state["sum_and_difference"](3, 1);
assert(sum == 4 && difference == 2);

// Call function in table
result = state["mytable"]["foo"]();
assert(result == 4);

Note that multi-value returns must have sel::tie on the LHS and not std::tie. This will create a sel::Tuple as opposed to an std::tuple which has the operator= implemented for the selector type.

Calling Free-standing C++ functions from Lua

int my_multiply(int a, int b) {
    return (a*b);
}

sel::State state;

// Register the function to the Lua global "c_multiply"
state["c_multiply"] = &my_multiply;

// Now we can call it (we can also call it from within lua)
int result = state["c_multiply"](5, 2);
assert(result == 10);

You can also register functor objects, lambdas, and any fully qualified std::function. See test/interop_tests.h for details.

Accepting Lua functions as Arguments

To retrieve a Lua function as a callable object in C++, you can use the sel::function type like so:

-- test.lua

function add(a, b)
    return a+b
end

function pass_add(x, y)
    take_fun_arg(add, x, y)
end
int take_fun_arg(sel::function<int(int, int)> fun, int a, int b) {
    return fun(a, b);
}

sel::State state;
state["take_fun_arg"] = &take_fun_arg;
state.Load("test.lua");
assert(state["pass_add"](3, 5) == 8)

The sel::function type is pretty much identical to the std::function type excepts it holds a shared_ptr to a Lua reference. Once all instances of a particular sel::function go out of scope, the Lua reference will automatically become unbound. Simply copying and retaining an instance of a sel::function will allow it to be callable later. You can also return a sel::function which will then be callable in C++ or Lua.

Running arbitrary code

sel::State state;
state("x = 5");

After running this snippet, x will have value 5 in the Lua runtime. Snippets run in this way cannot return anything to the caller at this time.

Registering Classes

struct Bar {
    int x;
    Bar(int x_) : x(x_) {}
    int AddThis(int y) { return x + y; }
};

sel::State state;
state["Bar"].SetClass<Bar, int>("add_this", &Bar::AddThis);
bar = Bar.new(5)
-- bar now refers to a new instance of Bar with its member x set to 5

x = bar:add_this(2)
-- x is now 7

bar = nil
--[[ the bar object will be destroyed the next time a garbage
     collection is run ]]--

The signature of the SetClass template method looks like the following:

template <typename T, typename... CtorArgs, typename... Funs>
void Selector::SetClass(Funs... funs);

The template parameters supplied explicitly are first T, the class you wish to register followed by CtorArgs..., the types that are accepted by the class's constructor. In addition to primitive types, you may also pass pointers or references to other types that have been or will be registered. Note that constructor overloading are not supported at this time. The arguments to the SetClass function are a list of member functions you wish to register (callable from Lua). The format is [function name, function pointer, ...].

Registering Class Member Variables

For convenience, if you pass a pointer to a member instead of a member function, Selene will automatically generate a setter and getter for the member. The getter name is just the name of the member variable you supply and the setter has "set_" prepended to that name.

// Define Bar as above
sel::State state;
state["Bar"].SetClass<Bar, int>("x", &Bar::x);
-- now we can do the following:
bar = Bar.new(4)

print(bar:x()) -- will print '4'

bar:set_x(-4)
print(bar:x()) -- will print '-4'

Member variables registered in this way which are declared const will not have a setter generated for them.

Registering Object Instances

You can also register an explicit object which was instantiated from C++. However, this object cannot be inherited from and you are in charge of the object's lifetime.

struct Foo {
    int x;
    Foo(int x_) : x(x_) {}

    int DoubleAdd(int y) { return 2 * (x + y); }
    void SetX(int x_) { x = x_; }
};

sel::State state;

// Instantiate a foo object with x initially set to 2
Foo foo(2);

// Binds the C++ instance foo to a table also called foo in Lua along
// with the DoubleAdd method and variable x. Binding a member variable
// will create a getter and setter as illustrated below.
// The user is not required to bind all members
state["foo"].SetObj(foo,
                    "double_add", &Foo::DoubleAdd,
                    "x", &Foo::x);

assert(state["foo"]["x"]() == 2);

state["foo"]["set_x"](4);
assert(foo.x == 4);

int result = state["foo"]["double_add"](3);
assert(result == 14);

In the above example, the functions foo.double_add and foo.set_x will also be accessible from within Lua after registration occurs. As with class member variables, object instance variables which are const will not have a setter generated for them.

Writeup

You can read more about this project in the three blogposts that describes it:

There have been syntax changes in library usage but the underlying concepts of variadic template use and generics is the same.

Roadmap

The following features are planned, although nothing is guaranteed:

  • Object lifetime handling
  • Smarter Lua module loading
  • Hooks for module reloading

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