Thanks, that was very helpful.

The current situation I'm facing is how to actually utilize an OBJ file.  I can generate one, no problem (yay). I can link it into an EXE it doesn't seem to want to reference it.  I expect I need to do some sort of "load" on it (which I can do with Lisp files) to get it into the Lisp symbol system.

I trying creating a DLL and that was successful but then when I try and link the EXE together using the DLL it says the DLL file format is unrecognized (this was with a shared library DLL).

So, some general direction would be helpful and--more specifically--how to tell ECL to load an OBJ file would be great.  (load "xxx.obj") didn't go so well. :-)

Thanks,
Garrett Dangerfield.

On Thu, Dec 3, 2020 at 12:53 PM pdoherty <pdoherty@protonmail.com> wrote:
I can't speak to the Windows requirement, but this example I put together should help get you started:

https://github.com/ethagnawl/ecl-hello-r-lisp

PRD

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-------- Original Message --------
On Dec 3, 2020, 3:45 PM, Garrett Dangerfield < garrett@dangerimp.com> wrote:

Is there an simple example program somewhere (I can't find one) that shows a function defined in a Lisp file and then used in a C/C++ file?  With all the compile and linking commands needed to make it work?

Ideally for Windows using Microsoft command line tools.

Thanks much,
Garrett Dangerfield.