When you install RL_PRES it installs a number of files into the directory you specify. These files include:
An example is supplied which demonstrates using the RL_PRES module to generate a document with a graph on each page.
The example consists of the following files which can be found in the example sub-directory of the directory RL_PRES was installed into:
The example is designed to be run in the \PReS directory and it is assumed that you will also be storing the rl_pres.pdi include file in this directory and storing your Python chart files in \PreS\reuse\charts. You can arrange the files differently if you want but if you do you will need to modify the references to the files in the example.pds script.
To run the example:
The example should generate a document with a bar chart on each page. Each bar chart is plotted from the eight values at the end of each record in example.dta.
The code in example.pds illustrates the main features of our approach.
Please look at the comments in example.pds and rl_pres.pdi for further details.
The RL_PRES interface dll contains the PReS interface hook entry point
UserInstruction
which is declared
__declspec(dllexport) int UserInstruction(HWND hWnd, HINSTANCE hInst,
double FAR *options, char FAR *s0, char FAR *s1);
The first two arguments are not used by our code, but the hook has the
following user values/arguments.
options double array of length 5
options[0] on input this holds the required action
0.0 = simple string with '\n's only
1.0 = simple string with '\r\n's to be converted to '\n'
on output this holds the error value
0 No error
Non-zero An error was detected, use the value of s1 to
find out more.
options[1] ilen ie the actual length of input string
options[2] olen the available length of the output string
options[3] set by rl_pres.dll to 0
options[4] set by rl_pres.dll to the length of the output string
s0 the input buffer length at least ilen
s1 the output buffer length at least olen. This string will
be used to return at most olen bytes fro stdout/stderr
The actual length used will be returned in options[4]
We provide an example of calling the interface from C as
both a test of correctness and as a useful test script. The program
can be run as
trl_pres.exe aaa.py
and this should result in some output being printed on the command terminal.
An accompanying exe file is python.exe which effectively duplicates a
normal python command, but tries as far as possible to use only the code
in the installed PPPPPPP v.vv installation directory.