Want to create animation dll for Window XP Is it ok to create Java2d animation and export as dll??
问题:
回答1:
Yes. You need to write code in C++ to start the JVM with the invocation interface to JNI, and call into it. However, you may find it difficult to create windows in this way that integrate seamlessly with your Windows environment application to display your animation. This is a rather advanced JNI usage, and I'd recommend reading the JNI book before even trying a little bit of it.
回答2:
I doubt so, unless there's some 3rd party tools out there. For your case where graphics is involved, chances are even lower.
回答3:
Actually, what Quentin said should work.
When you compile java to native with GCJ
you first compile the .java
files into platform specific .o
(object) files. Presumably you would compile the .o
files into a dll
rather than an exe
. GCJ
also includes components like the garbage collector, and base java libraries. None of which require a JVM
to run. The downer is that the dll
would be huge. A simple "Hello World" app when compiled with GCJ
is ~35MB
, thanks to all the default libs and the garbage collector. Likewise your dll
would be huge.
回答4:
I am pretty sure you can only create .Jar files from java not dlls
回答5:
There are "bridges" that allow Java and non-Java code to call into one another. Depending on what you are trying to accomplish, these might be useful as you could write your Java code and then call into it from a C++ or C# DLL, depending on which language you are creating your DLL with, which will also determine what kind of bridge you need. I have never seen a freely provided bridge though. All the ones I've found when looking had to be purchased.
回答6:
No, IIRC you can't. DLLs are linked directly when loaded. Java code needs a jvm, so you can only provide a dll that starts a jvm and starts code there, but not all necessarily stuff fits in the dll.
You should not do this. It looks like you're trying to use the wrong approach for your problem.
回答7:
Well…
- GCJ is available for Windows.
- GCJ is part of GCC.
- GCC can create dlls.
It might be possible to put that together to build DLLs using GCJ.
回答8:
I agree with bmargulies. It's probably feasible for an expert, but it would be a large DLL and you'd be mixing technologies that were never made to work together. It doesn't make sense to try this, in my opinion.