You may need to have separate header files for your C sources to include. The C headers should not have any C++ code that the C compiler might be expected to parse. In there, you would provide the C interface to your C++ library. By providing the extern "C"
modifier, as you indicate you would do, to the function declarations in this header you tell the compiler to make the linkage work for C programs.
So if you need the C program to hold a reference to an object, just pass it back and forth through the C interface as a void *
pointer. In C you just treat it as a magic cookie.
Other posts speak to exposing the interface through a DLL, which is also useful knowledge but not strictly speaking to the (standard) language aspects.
Edit
Aw heck. The extern "C"
part is C++ syntax. So, on the C++ side you must declare the C interface functions with extern "C"
but on the C side you can't have that syntax. You can make this happen by the common idiom:
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
void foo();
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif