Speaking of which - there's a project called CARLA that I'm using for autonomous driving research for my group. It's written in C++ and has Python bindings available. I heard that generating Rust bindings for C++ was troublesome, do you think it might be easier to generate Rust bindings from their Python bindings instead?
I haven't touched anything that is C++ for quite a while. So not sure if the binding generation is that painful for Rust... I know that it is mindblowingly easy to wrap Rust stuff in Python and use it, I did that before, so much nicer than the "native" CPython API.. but to generate Rust bindings from the Python bindings instead? I don't think that's possible
As I said, I haven't tried doing anything with C++ for ages, let alone wrap it in Rust, however, if it is as painful as you say it is, I would wrap the C++ in C first and generate the bindings for Rust on top of that
Yeah that's kind of the last resort I guess. Would rather like to avoid that though. Ehh, let's see. I don't need dlib bindings immediately, maybe I'll try again next month or so.
@E_net4ofthedownvotebrigade This approach makes perfect sense to me: one can do it gradually, and there's no external dependency (i.e. tooling) involved in the process
@E_net4ofthedownvotebrigade Can you please tell what more should my question have except the code which I 'm no longer having? stackoverflow.com/questions/61108611/…