As part of getting familiar with GObject I'm trying to create a "Hello, world" interface following the example in the reference manual. Here's what I have in hello_world_if.h
:
#ifndef __HELLO_WORLD_IF_H__
#define __HELLO_WORLD_IF_H__
#include <glib-object.h>
G_BEGIN_DECLS
#define TYPE_HELLO_WORLD_IF (hello_world_if_get_type())
#define HELLO_WORLD_IF(obj) (G_TYPE_CHECK_INSTANCE_CAST((obj), TYPE_HELLO_WORLD_IF, HelloWorldIf))
#define IS_HELLO_WORLD_IF(obj) (G_TYPE_CHECK_INSTANCE_TYPE((obj), TYPE_HELLO_WORLD_IF))
#define HELLO_WORLD_IF_GET_INTERFACE(inst) (G_TYPE_INSTANCE_GET_INTERFACE((inst), TYPE_HELLO_WORLD_IF, HelloWorldIfInterface))
typedef struct _HelloWorldIf HelloWorldIf; /* dummy object */
typedef struct _HelloWorldIfInterface HelloWorldIfInterface;
struct _HelloWorldIfInterface {
GTypeInterface parent;
gchar *(*get_hello)(HelloWorldIf *self);
};
GType hello_world_if_get_type(void);
gchar *hello_world_if_get_hello(HelloWorldIf *self);
G_END_DECLS
#endif /* __HELLO_WORLD_IF_H__ */
and in hello_world_if.c
:
#include "hello_world_if.h"
G_DEFINE_INTERFACE(HelloWorldIf, hello_world_if, 0);
static void
hello_world_if_default_init(gpointer g_class) {
/* Add properties and signals to the interface here */
}
gchar *
hello_world_if_get_hello(HelloWorldIf *self) {
g_return_if_fail(IS_HELLO_WORLD_IF(self));
HELLO_WORLD_IF_GET_INTERFACE(self)->get_hello(self);
}
But this doesn't compile:
$ make
gcc -g -pthread -I/usr/include/glib-2.0 -I/usr/lib/glib-2.0/include -c -o hello_world_if.o hello_world_if.c
hello_world_if.c:3: error: expected declaration specifiers or ‘...’ before ‘hello_world_if’
hello_world_if.c:3: error: expected declaration specifiers or ‘...’ before numeric constant
hello_world_if.c:3: warning: data definition has no type or storage class
make: *** [hello_world_if.o] Error 1
From reading other answers here it seems this "expected declaration specifiers" message often means a necessary header file hasn't been included or has been included too late. But I'm not sure how that could be the case here. (Specifically, adding #include <glib.h>
or #include <glib-object.h>
to the C file doesn't change anything.)
I must be missing something simple but I just don't see it. Help?
Turns out there's a simple explanation: The G_DEFINE_INTERFACE
macro was added in GLib 2.24.0, but I'm using version 2.22.5 (the standard on CentOS 6.3). I'll need to either build and install a newer version of GLib or dig up older reference documentation—the website doesn't go back further than 2.26.1.