I haven't written any embedded perl programs, but as far as I know, if you write your embedding code correctly, the perl code in question should be able to do anything that a "stand alone" perl program could. The setup code in C shouldn't take more than a dozen or so lines.

As an aside, the reason I've never written a perl-embedding program, is that I've found it much to start with a perl program and load the C code using XS (IOW write your C code as a bunch of libraries and bootstrap it from perl (which could be as simple as doing one function call).

update: just in case I wasn't clear: your embedded perl interpreter should be able to load compiled XS/C/C++ etc modules just like a normal perl interpreter can.


In reply to Re: Can arbitrary XS/SWIG using modules be loaded into an embedded perl at runtime? by Joost
in thread Can arbitrary XS/SWIG using modules be loaded into an embedded perl at runtime? by kingkongrevenge

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