Reputation:
I am very new to C# (just started learning in the past week).
I have a custom DLL written in C with the following function:
DLLIMPORT void test_function (double **test)
What I am looking to do is have a pointer from C# for the array 'test'.
So, if in the DLL function I have test[0] = 450.60, test[1] = 512.99 etc. I want to be able to have that available in my C# program.
In the C# program I have something similar to:
namespace TestUtil
{
public class Echo
{
public double[] results = new double[10];
public double[] results_cpy = new double[10];
[DllImport("test_dll.dll", CallingConvention = CallingConvention.Cdecl)]
static extern unsafe void test_function(ref double[] Result);
public unsafe void Tell()
{
results[0] = 0.0;
results[1] = 0.0;
results_cpy[0] = 0.0;
results_cpy[1] = 0.0;
test_function(ref results);
results_cpy[0] = (double)results[0] + (double)results[1] ;
}
}
}
In the DLL's 'test_function' function I used the following:
*test[0] = 450.60;
*test[1] = 512.99;
Within the DLL everything was OK (I used a message box within the DLL to check the values were being applied). Back in the C# program 'results[0]' appears to be fine and I can get values from it, but 'results[1]' gives me an index out of bounds error. I know this because if I omit '+ (double)results[1]' I receive no error. Also, if I make no attempt within the DLL to modify 'test[1]' it retains the original value from C# (in my example 0.0).
Obviously I am not doing something right but this is the closest I have been able to get to having it work at all. Everything else I have tried fails miserably.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Upvotes: 1
Views: 30828
Reputation: 3483
There's no need for unsafe code. In fact, there's no need to pass by reference at all. If your signature looks like this:
void test_function (double *test)
and your import looks like this:
static extern void test_function(double[] Result);
Then everything should work fine. That is, assuming you only need to modify the array and not return a completely new array.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 45117
Similar question on SO here. Your looking at an opaque pointer, so it's likely a by-ref system InPtr as described in the other thread.
By the way, why not make it a double* instead of double**. That would make life easier, I think.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 10875
I'm guessing you already know C++; if that's the case, you really should look at C++/CLI which lets you easily use managed code (.NET) from C++. The code you've shown above really isn't very C#-like (you should completely avoid unsafe
).
Upvotes: 1