I know that it's not possible to safely export a function C++ parameters (eg STL strings), because C++ does not specify a standard ABI. (I've read that as an answer to How to call a function from a shared library? )
People tend to believe that if both your library and your program have been built with the same compiler then this isn't an issue, but unfortunately, for some VC++ compilers, this is not entirely true.
Herb Sutter and Alexandrescu in "C++ Coding Standards" propose to rely on portable types (eg built-in types) instead of a function that takes a string
.
ie instead of using std::string
in a module interface
std::string Translate( const std::string & );
use a
void Translate( const char *src, char* dest, size_t destSize );
Although they agree this is fairly complex for both the caller and the callee, they don't propose a nicer alternative.
How can one nicely pass a more complex object, such as a std::map
using low-level types? (not to mention something as complex as map<string,vector<something_complex> >
)
How do you tackle such cases when exporting functions ?