lumars 1.1.0

A high level, lightweight LUA library.


To use this package, run the following command in your project's root directory:

Manual usage
Put the following dependency into your project's dependences section:

Overview

Lumars is a high-level wrapper around LUA 5.1 that aims to be lightweight while providing high quality of life features.

This library is in its early stages, so expect bugs. If you can be bothered, please open an issue alongside a minimised, idependent snippet of code that I can add as a unittest, which will also make it easier for me to debug.

Features

  • Statically linked
  • Bundled with prebuilt binaries for LuaJit for Windows and Posix
  • Dynamic values using TaggedAlgebraic
  • Ability to convert most D and Lua types to eachother (including structs)
  • Provides a high level interface, but also allows manual manipulation of the stack
  • Uses a struct-based API instead of classes, to minimise GC usage
  • Some types use ref counting in order to be easy to move around while still keeping lifetime guarentees
  • Doesn't shy away from the GC, but does try to minimise usage of it
  • Supports Lua 5.1 (mainly for LuaJit)
  • Bind Lua functions to statically typed D functions
  • Lambdas, functions, and delegates can all be exposed to Lua

Quick Start

Hello World

Create a new LuaState, passing in null so a new state is created. This struct is non-copyable so you might want to put it on the GC heap.

import lumars;

void main()
{
    auto l = LuaState(null); // Or `new LuaState`
    // openlibs is automatically called

    l.doString(`print("Hello, world!")`);
}

Here's another way by using the built-in print function.

import lumars;

void main()
{
    auto l = LuaState(null);

    auto print = l.globalTable.get!LuaFunc("print");
    print.pcall!0("Hello, world!");
    // !0 means "no return results"
}

And here's *another- way where we bind the Lua function into a D function:

import lumars;

void main()
{
    auto l = LuaState(null);

    auto print = l.globalTable.get!LuaFunc("print").bind!(void, string);
    print("Hello, world!");

    // If you want to pass it around like a D func:
    alias Func = void delegate(string);
    Func f = &print.asDelegate;
}

Tables

New Table

import lumars;

void main()
{
    auto l = LuaState(null);
    auto t = LuaTable.makeNew(&l);

    t["a"] = "bc";
    t[1] = 23;

    assert(t.get!string("a") == "bc");
    assert(t.get!int(1) == 23);
}

Iterate with ipairs

import std.conv : to;

auto l = LuaState(null);
l.doString(`t = { 1, 2, 3 }`);

auto t = l.globalTable.get!LuaTable("t");
auto sum = 0;
t.ipairs!((i, /*LuaValue*/ v)
{
    sum += v.value!LuaNumber.to!int; // LuaNumber is `double`
});
assert(sum == 6);

Iterate with statically typed ipairs

auto l = LuaState(null);
l.doString(`t = { 1, 2, 3 }`);

auto t = l.globalTable.get!LuaTable("t");
t.ipairs!(int, (i, /*int*/ v)
{
    assert(i == v);
});

Iterate with pairs

auto l = LuaState(null);
l.doString(`t = { a = "bc", [1] = 23 }`);

auto t = l.globalTable.get!LuaTable("t");
t.pairs!((k, v) // Both are LuaValue
{
    if(k.isText && k.value!string == "a")
        assert(v.value!string == "bc");
    else if(k.isNumber && k.value!LuaNumber == 1)
        assert(v.value!LuaNumber == 23);
    else
        assert(false);
});

Iterate with statically typed pairs

auto l = LuaState(null);
l.doString(`t = { a = "bc", easy = 123 }`);

auto t = l.globalTable.get!LuaTable("t");
t.pairs!(string, LuaValue, (/*string*/ k, /*LuaValue*/ v)
{
    if(k == "a")
        assert(v.value!string == "bc");
    else if(k == "easy")
        assert(v.value!LuaNumber == 123);
    else
        assert(false);
});

Array conversion

auto l = LuaState(null);
l.doString(`t = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 }`);

auto arr = l.globalTable.get!(int[])("t");
assert(arr == [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);

Functions

Echo

auto l = LuaState(null);
auto t = LuaTable.makeNew(&l);

t["echo"] = (string text){ writeln(text); };

auto f = t.get!LuaFunc("echo").bind!(void, string);
f("Hello, World!");

Mapping function

import std.conv : to;

auto l = LuaState(null);

int[] map(int[] input, LuaFunc mapper)
{
    foreach(ref num; input)
    {
        LuaValue[1] result = mapper.pcall!1(num);
        num = result[0].value!LuaNumber.to!int; // Lua numbers are doubles
    }

    return input;
}

l.globalTable["map"] = ↦
l.doString(`
    local values = {1, 2, 3}
    local func   = function(n) return n - 2 end
    local result = map(values, func)
    assert(result[1] == 2 and result[2] == 4 and result[3] == 6)
`);

Structs

Lumars can convert D structs to and from Lua.

When converting from Lua to D, any unknown fields are ignored, and any missing fields in the struct are set to their initial value.

In the future I'd like to introduce UDAs to customise behaviour, but for now this should be a sensible default.

static struct B
{
    string a;
}

static struct C
{
    string a;
}

static struct A
{
    string a;
    B[] b;
    C[string] c;
}

auto a = A(
    "bc",
    [B("c")],
    ["c": C("123")]
);

auto l = LuaState(null);

// *Anything- that .push can use is also useable by the likes of LuaTable.
// We're doing manual stack manip just because it's simpler for this case.
l.push(a);
scope(exit) l.pop(1);
auto luaa = l.get!A(-1);

assert(luaa.a == "bc");
assert(luaa.b.length == 1);
assert(luaa.b == [B("c")]);
assert(luaa.c.length == 1);
assert(luaa.c["c"] == C("123"));

Another example:

struct Vector2D
{
    float x;
    float y;
}

auto l = LuaState(null);

l.doString(`
    function addVectors(vectA, vectB)
        return {
            x = vectA.x + vectB.x,
            y = vectA.y + vectB.y
        }
    end
`);

auto f = l.globalTable.get!LuaFunc("addVectors").bind!(Vector2D, Vector2D, Vector2D);
assert(f(
    Vector2D(1, 1),
    Vector2D(9, 9)
) == Vector2D(10, 10));

nogc strings

Anytime you need to access a string that's on the Lua stack, instead of specifying a string (e.g. state.get!string(-1)) you can instead use const(char)[] which won't allocate any GC memory.

You do however have to keep in mind that the lifetime of the string is now attached to the lifetime of the stack variable, so be careful.

EmmyLua Annotations (IDE autocomplete)

One common annoyance when dealing with a mix of Lua and host language code, is the lack of autocompletion provided by your IDE when programming.

To help solve this issue, Lumars can help you generate a Lua file filled with EmmyLua annotations, allowing you to gain intelisense for any plugin that supports EmmyLua annotations.

It does a pretty ok job, but there's still a lot of room for improvement.

The easiest way to use it is like this:

import lumars;
import std.meta : AliasSeq;

struct S
{
    int a;
    LuaValue b;
}

alias EXPORT = AliasSeq!(
    "myfunc1", (string s, LuaValue v) { return S.init; }
);

void registerFuncs(LuaState* lua)
{
    lua.register!EXPORT("mylib");

    EmmyLuaBuilder b;
    b.addFunctions!EXPORT("mylib");
    
    import std.file : write;
    write("api.lua", b.toString());
    /++
        mylib = mylib or {}
        ---@class S
        ---@field public a number
        ---@field public b any
        local S
        --@type fun(_:string, _:any):S
        mylib.myfunc1 = mylib.myfunc1 or function() assert(false, 'not implemented') end
    ++/
}

Then simply require("api.lua") in your lua code, et voila (hopefully).

Contributing

I'm perfectly fine with anyone wanting to contribute.

I'd especially love it if you open an issue if you come across any bugs.

I'd also love it if you ever think "how do I do X?" and open an issue for it so I can add it to this README.

Authors:
  • Bradley Chatha
Dependencies:
bindbc-lua, taggedalgebraic
Versions:
1.13.0-alpha.1 2023-Aug-09
1.12.1 2023-Jun-23
1.12.0 2023-May-03
1.11.0 2023-Apr-05
1.10.0 2023-Feb-05
Show all 33 versions
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Score:
2.9
Short URL:
lumars.dub.pm