A header-only C++ library which provides a Lua wrapper with minimal overhead.
Refer to the documentation. In order to use the library you must clone
this repository and include lib/luwra.hpp
.
Have a question? Simply send me a an email or open an issue.
In the following examples lua
refers to an instance of lua_State*
.
Easily push values onto the stack:
// Push an integer
luwra::push(lua, 1338);
// Push a number
luwra::push(lua, 13.37);
// Push a boolean
luwra::push(lua, false);
// Push a string
luwra::push(lua, "Hello World");
Or retrieve them:
// Your function
int my_fun(int a, int b) {
return a + b;
}
// Prepare stack
luwra::push(lua, 13);
luwra::push(lua, 37);
// Read manually
int a = luwra::read<int>(lua, 1);
// Read with deduced type
int b = luwra::read(lua, -1);
// Apply your function
int result = luwra::apply(lua, my_fun);
// which is equivalent to
int result = luwra::apply(lua, 1, my_fun);
// and equivalent to
int result = luwra::apply(lua, -2, my_fun);
// All of this is essentially syntactic sugar for
int result = my_fun(luwra::read(lua, 1), luwra::read(lua, 2));
// You can also return the result to the stack
luwra::map(lua, 1, my_fun);
int result = luwra::read(state, -1);
Generate a C function which can be used by Lua:
// Assuming your function looks something like this
int my_function(const char* a, int b) {
// ...
}
// Convert to lua_CFunction
lua_CFunction cfun = LUWRA_WRAP(my_function);
// Do something with it, for example set it as a Lua global function
luwra::setGlobal(lua, "my_function", cfun);
-- Invoke the registered function
local my_result = my_function("Hello World", 1337)
print(my_result)
Or register your own class:
struct Point {
double x, y;
Point(double x, double y):
x(x), y(y)
{
std::cout << "Construct Point(" << x << ", " << y << ")" << std::endl;
}
~Point() {
std::cout << "Destruct Point(" << x << ", " << y << ")" << std::endl;
}
void scale(double f) {
x *= f;
y *= f;
}
std::string __tostring() {
return "<Point(" + std::to_string(x) + ", " + std::to_string(y) + ")>";
}
};
// Register the metatable and constructor
luwra::registerUserType<Point(double, double)>(
lua,
// Constructor name
"Point",
// Methods need to be declared here
{
LUWRA_MEMBER(Point, scale),
LUWRA_MEMBER(Point, x),
LUWRA_MEMBER(Point, y)
},
// Meta methods may be registered aswell
{
LUWRA_MEMBER(Point, __tostring)
}
);
-- Instantiate 'Point'
local point = Point(13, 37)
-- Invoke 'scale' method
point:scale(1.5)
-- Convert to string via '__tostring' meta method
print(point)
-- Read properties 'x' and 'y'
print(point:x(), point:y())
-- Set property 'x'
point:x(4.2)
You need a C++11-compliant compiler and at least Lua 5.1 to get this library to work. I recommend
using Lua 5.3 or later, to avoid the messy lua_Integer
situation. LuaJIT 2.0 seems to work aswell.
The attached GNU Makefile
allows you to run both examples and tests using make examples
and
make test
respectively. You might need to adjust LUA_*
variables, so Luwra finds the
Lua headers and library.
Assuming all headers are located in /usr/include/lua5.3
and the shared object name is
liblua5.3.so
, you need to invoke this:
make LUA_INCDIR=/usr/include/lua5.3 LUA_LIBNAME=lua5.3 test