## A simple example to show how to call a function written in v from c ### Compile as a shared library #### On Linux: Step 1: Compile the v code to a shared library using `v -cc gcc -shared v_test_print.v` or `v -cc gcc -shared v_test_math.v`. Step 2: Compile the c file using `gcc test_print.c v_test_print.so -o test_print -Wl,-rpath=.` or `gcc test_math.c v_test_math.so -o test_math -Wl,-rpath=.`. Step 3: Run the compiled c file using `./test_print` or `./test_math`. #### On Mac OSX: On Mac OSX, libgc can be obtained from homebrew by `brew install libgc`. During compiling and/or linking, `-I/usr/local/include -L/usr/local/lib` (for x86_64), or `-I/opt/homebrew/include -L/opt/homebrew/lib` (for arm64) can be added depending the arch. Step 1: Compile the v code to a shared library using `v -cc gcc -shared v_test_print.v` or `v -cc gcc -shared v_test_math.v`. Step 2: Compile the c file using `gcc test_print.c v_test_print.dylib -o test_print` or `gcc test_math.c v_test_math.dylib -o test_math`. Step 3: Run the compiled c file using `LD_LIBRARY_PATH=. ./test_print` or `LD_LIBRARY_PATH=. ./test_math`. #### On Windows: Step 1: Compile the v code to a shared library using `v -cc gcc -shared v_test_print.v` or `v -cc gcc -shared v_test_math.v`. Step 2: Compile the c file using `gcc test_print.c v_test_print.dll -o test_print.exe` or `gcc test_math.c v_test_math.dll -o test_math.exe`. Step 3: Run the compiled c file using `test_print.exe` or `test_math.exe`. ### Compile as a c file ***Requirements: `libgc` must be installed*** Step 1: Compile the v code to a shared library using `v -shared -cc gcc -o v_test_print.c v_test_print.v` or `v -shared -cc gcc -o v_test_math.c v_test_math.v`. *Specifying the output with a `.c` extension will generate the corresponding C source file.* Step 2: Compile the c file using `gcc test_print.c v_test_print.c -o test_print -lgc` or `gcc test_math.c v_test_math.c -o test_math -lgc -lm`. Step 3: Run the compiled c file using `./test_print` or `./test_math`.