note
AgentM
Well...for that, you need a C on-the-fly interpreter. While they do exist, you certainly don't need it for your project (and I won't link to one because of that). You say that you used a sub in another file and eval'ed it? I imagine that you open it, read it, and eval it. While this may work, it is not efficient and wholly unnecessary since Perl has built-in functionality to do exactly this- namely [require], [import], [use], or some combination thereof. If you had done that, your solution would be now far more obvious. All you would have to do is compile your converted Perl to C function into an object file (or even a shared object! whoa!) and then link to it from your main script. While they may be interesting, C interpreters are at best sluggish and easily avoidable. Good luck!
<br><h6><a href="http://www.mac-man.de">AgentM Systems</a> nor <a href="http://www.nasca.de">Nasca Enterprises</a> nor
<a
href="/index.pl?node=Bone%3A%3AEasy&lastnode_id=1072">Bone::Easy</a> nor <a href="http://www.macperl.com">Macperl</a> is responsible for the
comments made by
<a href="/index.pl?node=AgentM&lastnode_id=1072">AgentM</a>. Remember, you can build any logical system with NOR.</h6>
72832
72832