[Tutorial] SketchUp Ruby C Extension
-
I clicked Fork when I was under SUExt - and it forked the whole repository. I guess there is no way to fork a part of a repository... ?
-
Clicking "Pull Request" and I get a message:
"Oops! The TBD:master branch is already up-to-date with thomthom:master β maybe you want to try something else?"
....I should stop clicking now...
-
fork - it creates a duplicate of the entire project in your account. you can change only in one subdirectory if you want.
pull request - you make the changes in your forked project and send a pull request so I can integrate your changesyou need to add some changes to send a pull request to me first.
-
Right. Should I leave the other folders alone?
Just thinking it might be nice with a repo just for C Extension - nothing else. Just to keep it clean and simple.
-
https://github.com/sketchucation is ready to accept projects
-
@unknownuser said:
https://github.com/sketchucation is ready to accept projects
Right'o. So can we create an "SketchUp Ruby C Extension" project? Then start adding stuff.
-
pull requests away - https://github.com/sketchucation/suext
-
I just got a very simple Hello World example working under OSX. Will create another example with some basic Ruby object interactions and expand a little on my comments. Then I will upload it to a repository. Think I'll focus on the step by step for OSX first to get the structure up. Then Windows - seem to be a bit more tweaking to get that working.
-
This sounds great Thom and TBD and everyone one else who gets involved. I keep being afraid that I might need to learn some of this for my upcoming work.
Chris
-
What you got cooking?
-
Right - attempting to build on Windows.
I have Visual C++ Express 201 installed and I'm trying to build using nmake. Getting some errors:
I'm not sure what that means. Though I have a suspicion I need to specify the path to where windows.h is located... Though I don't know where to do so...
-
Uploaded my WIP at: https://bitbucket.org/thomthom/sketchup-ruby-c-extension/
Working on OSX 10.5.
-
-
Think I got one step further. This thread mentions that vcvars32.bat needs to be run from the prompt: http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/Vsexpressvc/thread/325b5459-c469-40d0-bf6d-e3356a2f14cd/
And this (http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6622869/problem-with-nmake)
So after I did that I got a different error. Missing crt file...
-
( Apologies for those with the know-how - I will be posting lots of silly stuff as I work through this. Posting to make a record of what I am doing. "Thinking out loud". )
-
Got it working!
Uncommented a
#pragma comment(lib, "crt.lib");
I had. TBD's SUExt project had a reference to it. Which is what I based my project on. Seeing how it also referred to#pragma comment(lib, "msvcrt-ruby18.lib");
I just tried to see what happened if I removed the ref to crt.lib. Everything worked fine after that point.Now I wonder what the other lines do:
#pragma comment(lib, "kernel32.lib") #pragma comment(lib, "gdi32.lib") #pragma comment(lib, "user32.lib") #pragma comment(lib, "shell32.lib")
I'm looking at this tutorial: http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/hoanga/2006/12/14/getting-a-ruby-c-extension-to-compile-on-windows/
It made no reference to any of this. ( what is it? Is it really required? )I'm guessing
#include <windows.h>
is required though. -
Now... I'd like to find a way to make any output from extconf.rb and make/nmake put everything is a separate directory - for each platform.
-
Huh... I removed all of that stuff completely, as http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/hoanga/2006/12/14/getting-a-ruby-c-extension-to-compile-on-windows/ made no reference to it at all. Worked fine without. Guess it was required due to the way the Pelles C project was set up...
-
Hey Chris, when we get around to writing up the step by step instructions, are you willing to be a guinea pig?
-
Absolutely!
Advertisement