efl/src/lib/elementary/elm_slideshow_eo.c

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elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK const Efl_Event_Description _ELM_SLIDESHOW_EVENT_CHANGED =
EFL_EVENT_DESCRIPTION("changed");
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK const Efl_Event_Description _ELM_SLIDESHOW_EVENT_TRANSITION_END =
EFL_EVENT_DESCRIPTION("transition,end");
void _elm_slideshow_cache_after_set(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd, int count);
static Eina_Error
__eolian_elm_slideshow_cache_after_set_reflect(Eo *obj, Eina_Value val)
{
Eina_Error r = 0; int cval;
if (!eina_value_int_convert(&val, &cval))
{
r = EINA_ERROR_VALUE_FAILED;
goto end;
}
elm_obj_slideshow_cache_after_set(obj, cval);
end:
eina_value_flush(&val);
return r;
}
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_VOID_FUNC_BODYV(elm_obj_slideshow_cache_after_set, EFL_FUNC_CALL(count), int count);
int _elm_slideshow_cache_after_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
static Eina_Value
__eolian_elm_slideshow_cache_after_get_reflect(const Eo *obj)
{
int val = elm_obj_slideshow_cache_after_get(obj);
return eina_value_int_init(val);
}
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODY_CONST(elm_obj_slideshow_cache_after_get, int, 0);
void _elm_slideshow_cache_before_set(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd, int count);
static Eina_Error
__eolian_elm_slideshow_cache_before_set_reflect(Eo *obj, Eina_Value val)
{
Eina_Error r = 0; int cval;
if (!eina_value_int_convert(&val, &cval))
{
r = EINA_ERROR_VALUE_FAILED;
goto end;
}
elm_obj_slideshow_cache_before_set(obj, cval);
end:
eina_value_flush(&val);
return r;
}
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_VOID_FUNC_BODYV(elm_obj_slideshow_cache_before_set, EFL_FUNC_CALL(count), int count);
int _elm_slideshow_cache_before_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
static Eina_Value
__eolian_elm_slideshow_cache_before_get_reflect(const Eo *obj)
{
int val = elm_obj_slideshow_cache_before_get(obj);
return eina_value_int_init(val);
}
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODY_CONST(elm_obj_slideshow_cache_before_get, int, 0);
void _elm_slideshow_layout_set(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd, const char *layout);
static Eina_Error
__eolian_elm_slideshow_layout_set_reflect(Eo *obj, Eina_Value val)
{
Eina_Error r = 0; const char *cval;
if (!eina_value_string_convert(&val, &cval))
{
r = EINA_ERROR_VALUE_FAILED;
goto end;
}
elm_obj_slideshow_layout_set(obj, cval);
end:
eina_value_flush(&val);
return r;
}
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_VOID_FUNC_BODYV(elm_obj_slideshow_layout_set, EFL_FUNC_CALL(layout), const char *layout);
const char *_elm_slideshow_layout_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
static Eina_Value
__eolian_elm_slideshow_layout_get_reflect(const Eo *obj)
{
const char *val = elm_obj_slideshow_layout_get(obj);
return eina_value_string_init(val);
}
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODY_CONST(elm_obj_slideshow_layout_get, const char *, NULL);
void _elm_slideshow_transition_set(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd, const char *transition);
static Eina_Error
__eolian_elm_slideshow_transition_set_reflect(Eo *obj, Eina_Value val)
{
Eina_Error r = 0; const char *cval;
if (!eina_value_string_convert(&val, &cval))
{
r = EINA_ERROR_VALUE_FAILED;
goto end;
}
elm_obj_slideshow_transition_set(obj, cval);
end:
eina_value_flush(&val);
return r;
}
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_VOID_FUNC_BODYV(elm_obj_slideshow_transition_set, EFL_FUNC_CALL(transition), const char *transition);
const char *_elm_slideshow_transition_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
static Eina_Value
__eolian_elm_slideshow_transition_get_reflect(const Eo *obj)
{
const char *val = elm_obj_slideshow_transition_get(obj);
return eina_value_string_init(val);
}
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODY_CONST(elm_obj_slideshow_transition_get, const char *, NULL);
void _elm_slideshow_items_loop_set(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd, Eina_Bool loop);
static Eina_Error
__eolian_elm_slideshow_items_loop_set_reflect(Eo *obj, Eina_Value val)
{
Eina_Error r = 0; Eina_Bool cval;
if (!eina_value_bool_convert(&val, &cval))
{
r = EINA_ERROR_VALUE_FAILED;
goto end;
}
elm_obj_slideshow_items_loop_set(obj, cval);
end:
eina_value_flush(&val);
return r;
}
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_VOID_FUNC_BODYV(elm_obj_slideshow_items_loop_set, EFL_FUNC_CALL(loop), Eina_Bool loop);
Eina_Bool _elm_slideshow_items_loop_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
static Eina_Value
__eolian_elm_slideshow_items_loop_get_reflect(const Eo *obj)
{
Eina_Bool val = elm_obj_slideshow_items_loop_get(obj);
return eina_value_bool_init(val);
}
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODY_CONST(elm_obj_slideshow_items_loop_get, Eina_Bool, 0);
void _elm_slideshow_timeout_set(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd, double timeout);
static Eina_Error
__eolian_elm_slideshow_timeout_set_reflect(Eo *obj, Eina_Value val)
{
Eina_Error r = 0; double cval;
if (!eina_value_double_convert(&val, &cval))
{
r = EINA_ERROR_VALUE_FAILED;
goto end;
}
elm_obj_slideshow_timeout_set(obj, cval);
end:
eina_value_flush(&val);
return r;
}
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_VOID_FUNC_BODYV(elm_obj_slideshow_timeout_set, EFL_FUNC_CALL(timeout), double timeout);
double _elm_slideshow_timeout_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
static Eina_Value
__eolian_elm_slideshow_timeout_get_reflect(const Eo *obj)
{
double val = elm_obj_slideshow_timeout_get(obj);
return eina_value_double_init(val);
}
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODY_CONST(elm_obj_slideshow_timeout_get, double, 0);
const Eina_List *_elm_slideshow_items_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODY_CONST(elm_obj_slideshow_items_get, const Eina_List *, NULL);
const Eina_List *_elm_slideshow_transitions_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODY_CONST(elm_obj_slideshow_transitions_get, const Eina_List *, NULL);
unsigned int _elm_slideshow_count_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODY_CONST(elm_obj_slideshow_count_get, unsigned int, 0);
Elm_Widget_Item *_elm_slideshow_item_current_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODY_CONST(elm_obj_slideshow_item_current_get, Elm_Widget_Item *, NULL);
const Eina_List *_elm_slideshow_layouts_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODY_CONST(elm_obj_slideshow_layouts_get, const Eina_List *, NULL);
void _elm_slideshow_previous(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_VOID_FUNC_BODY(elm_obj_slideshow_previous);
Elm_Widget_Item *_elm_slideshow_item_nth_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd, unsigned int nth);
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODYV_CONST(elm_obj_slideshow_item_nth_get, Elm_Widget_Item *, NULL, EFL_FUNC_CALL(nth), unsigned int nth);
void _elm_slideshow_next(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_VOID_FUNC_BODY(elm_obj_slideshow_next);
void _elm_slideshow_clear(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_VOID_FUNC_BODY(elm_obj_slideshow_clear);
Elm_Widget_Item *_elm_slideshow_item_add(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd, const Elm_Slideshow_Item_Class *itc, const void *data);
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODYV(elm_obj_slideshow_item_add, Elm_Widget_Item *, NULL, EFL_FUNC_CALL(itc, data), const Elm_Slideshow_Item_Class *itc, const void *data);
Elm_Widget_Item *_elm_slideshow_item_sorted_insert(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd, const Elm_Slideshow_Item_Class *itc, const void *data, Eina_Compare_Cb func);
elementary: Rename EAPI macro to ELM_API in Elementary library Patch from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. = The Rationale = This patch is from a series of patches to rename EAPI symbols to specific library DSOs. EAPI was designed to be able to pass `__attribute__ ((visibility ("default")))` for symbols with GCC, which would mean that even if -fvisibility=hidden was used when compiling the library, the needed symbols would get exported. MSVC __almost__ works like GCC (or mingw) in which you can declare everything as export and it will just work (slower, but it will work). But there's a caveat: global variables will not work the same way for MSVC, but works for mingw and GCC. For global variables (as opposed to functions), MSVC requires correct DSO visibility for MSVC: instead of declaring a symbol as export for everything, you need to declare it as import when importing from another DSO and export when defining it locally. With current EAPI definitions, we get the following example working in mingw and MSVC (observe it doesn't define any global variables as exported symbols). Example 1: dll1: ``` EAPI void foo(void); EAPI void bar() { foo(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI void foo() { printf ("foo\n"); } ``` This works fine with API defined as __declspec(dllexport) in both cases and for gcc defining as `__atttribute__((visibility("default")))`. However, the following: Example 2: dll1: ``` EAPI extern int foo; EAPI void foobar(void); EAPI void bar() { foo = 5; foobar(); } ``` dll2: ``` EAPI int foo = 0; EAPI void foobar() { printf ("foo %d\n", foo); } ``` This will work on mingw but will not work for MSVC. And that's why LIBAPI is the only solution that works for MSVC. Co-authored-by: João Paulo Taylor Ienczak Zanette <jpaulotiz@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lucas Cavalcante de Sousa <lucks.sousa@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ricardo Campos <ricardo.campos@expertise.dev>
2020-10-11 09:00:04 -07:00
ELM_API ELM_API_WEAK EFL_FUNC_BODYV(elm_obj_slideshow_item_sorted_insert, Elm_Widget_Item *, NULL, EFL_FUNC_CALL(itc, data, func), const Elm_Slideshow_Item_Class *itc, const void *data, Eina_Compare_Cb func);
Efl_Object *_elm_slideshow_efl_object_constructor(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
Eina_Bool _elm_slideshow_efl_ui_widget_widget_input_event_handler(Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd, const Efl_Event *eo_event, Efl_Canvas_Object *source);
const Efl_Access_Action_Data *_elm_slideshow_efl_access_widget_action_elm_actions_get(const Eo *obj, Elm_Slideshow_Data *pd);
static Eina_Bool
_elm_slideshow_class_initializer(Efl_Class *klass)
{
const Efl_Object_Ops *opsp = NULL;
const Efl_Object_Property_Reflection_Ops *ropsp = NULL;
#ifndef ELM_SLIDESHOW_EXTRA_OPS
#define ELM_SLIDESHOW_EXTRA_OPS
#endif
EFL_OPS_DEFINE(ops,
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_cache_after_set, _elm_slideshow_cache_after_set),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_cache_after_get, _elm_slideshow_cache_after_get),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_cache_before_set, _elm_slideshow_cache_before_set),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_cache_before_get, _elm_slideshow_cache_before_get),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_layout_set, _elm_slideshow_layout_set),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_layout_get, _elm_slideshow_layout_get),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_transition_set, _elm_slideshow_transition_set),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_transition_get, _elm_slideshow_transition_get),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_items_loop_set, _elm_slideshow_items_loop_set),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_items_loop_get, _elm_slideshow_items_loop_get),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_timeout_set, _elm_slideshow_timeout_set),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_timeout_get, _elm_slideshow_timeout_get),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_items_get, _elm_slideshow_items_get),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_transitions_get, _elm_slideshow_transitions_get),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_count_get, _elm_slideshow_count_get),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_item_current_get, _elm_slideshow_item_current_get),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_layouts_get, _elm_slideshow_layouts_get),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_previous, _elm_slideshow_previous),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_item_nth_get, _elm_slideshow_item_nth_get),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_next, _elm_slideshow_next),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_clear, _elm_slideshow_clear),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_item_add, _elm_slideshow_item_add),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(elm_obj_slideshow_item_sorted_insert, _elm_slideshow_item_sorted_insert),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(efl_constructor, _elm_slideshow_efl_object_constructor),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(efl_ui_widget_input_event_handler, _elm_slideshow_efl_ui_widget_widget_input_event_handler),
EFL_OBJECT_OP_FUNC(efl_access_widget_action_elm_actions_get, _elm_slideshow_efl_access_widget_action_elm_actions_get),
ELM_SLIDESHOW_EXTRA_OPS
);
opsp = &ops;
static const Efl_Object_Property_Reflection refl_table[] = {
{"cache_after", __eolian_elm_slideshow_cache_after_set_reflect, __eolian_elm_slideshow_cache_after_get_reflect},
{"cache_before", __eolian_elm_slideshow_cache_before_set_reflect, __eolian_elm_slideshow_cache_before_get_reflect},
{"layout", __eolian_elm_slideshow_layout_set_reflect, __eolian_elm_slideshow_layout_get_reflect},
{"transition", __eolian_elm_slideshow_transition_set_reflect, __eolian_elm_slideshow_transition_get_reflect},
{"items_loop", __eolian_elm_slideshow_items_loop_set_reflect, __eolian_elm_slideshow_items_loop_get_reflect},
{"timeout", __eolian_elm_slideshow_timeout_set_reflect, __eolian_elm_slideshow_timeout_get_reflect},
};
static const Efl_Object_Property_Reflection_Ops rops = {
refl_table, EINA_C_ARRAY_LENGTH(refl_table)
};
ropsp = &rops;
return efl_class_functions_set(klass, opsp, ropsp);
}
static const Efl_Class_Description _elm_slideshow_class_desc = {
EO_VERSION,
"Elm.Slideshow",
EFL_CLASS_TYPE_REGULAR,
sizeof(Elm_Slideshow_Data),
_elm_slideshow_class_initializer,
_elm_slideshow_class_constructor,
NULL
};
EFL_DEFINE_CLASS(elm_slideshow_class_get, &_elm_slideshow_class_desc, EFL_UI_LAYOUT_BASE_CLASS, EFL_ACCESS_WIDGET_ACTION_MIXIN, ELM_LAYOUT_MIXIN, EFL_UI_LEGACY_INTERFACE, NULL);
#include "elm_slideshow_eo.legacy.c"