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Foreign.Marshal.Array | Portability | portable | Stability | provisional | Maintainer | ffi@haskell.org |
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Description |
Marshalling support: routines allocating, storing, and retrieving Haskell
lists that are represented as arrays in the foreign language
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Synopsis |
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Marshalling arrays
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Allocation
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Allocate storage for the given number of elements of a storable type
(like Foreign.Marshal.Alloc.malloc, but for multiple elements).
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Like mallocArray, but add an extra position to hold a special
termination element.
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Temporarily allocate space for the given number of elements
(like Foreign.Marshal.Alloc.alloca, but for multiple elements).
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Like allocaArray, but add an extra position to hold a special
termination element.
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Adjust the size of an array
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Adjust the size of an array including an extra position for the end marker.
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Marshalling
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Convert an array of given length into a Haskell list. This version
traverses the array backwards using an accumulating parameter,
which uses constant stack space. The previous version using mapM
needed linear stack space.
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Convert an array terminated by the given end marker into a Haskell list
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Write the list elements consecutive into memory
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Write the list elements consecutive into memory and terminate them with the
given marker element
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Combined allocation and marshalling
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Write a list of storable elements into a newly allocated, consecutive
sequence of storable values
(like Foreign.Marshal.Utils.new, but for multiple elements).
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Write a list of storable elements into a newly allocated, consecutive
sequence of storable values, where the end is fixed by the given end marker
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Temporarily store a list of storable values in memory
(like Foreign.Marshal.Utils.with, but for multiple elements).
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Like withArray, but a terminator indicates where the array ends
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Like withArray, but the action gets the number of values
as an additional parameter
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Like withArrayLen, but a terminator indicates where the array ends
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Copying
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(argument order: destination, source)
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Copy the given number of elements from the second array (source) into the
first array (destination); the copied areas may not overlap
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Copy the given number of elements from the second array (source) into the
first array (destination); the copied areas may overlap
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Finding the length
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Return the number of elements in an array, excluding the terminator
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Indexing
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Advance a pointer into an array by the given number of elements
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Produced by Haddock version 2.6.0 |