HelloWorld
is a very simple piece of code showing how text is written to the
console. All other examples in Basics
and System
use the same technique.
The file CommonFramework.h
contains the entry point and all code
necessary to support the example itself, including the construction
of the console and the cleanup stack. Putting code into a .h
file may not be conventional practice, but it is useful
to do so here.
Click on the following link to download the example: HelloWorld.zip
Download some additional files required by the example: CommonFramework.zip.
Click browse to view the example code.
Click browse to view the additional file.
The example includes the two project
files needed for building: bld.inf
and the .mmp
file.
The Symbian platform build process describes how to build this application, which results in an executable called:
\epoc32\release\<target>\<urel
or udeb>\HELLOWORLD.EXE
.
Run the executable HELLOWORLD.EXE
.
Executables for the emulator targets wins
and winscw
can be run on your PC. Executables
for ARM targets must be copied to your target platform before being
run.
The example shows the use
of the _LIT
macro which is used throughout all of
the examples. The macro generates a:
const static TLitC<TInt>
object and is an efficient and convenient way of generating constant literal text.
As this is a wide (Unicode) build, TLItC<TInt>
is a typedef for TLitC16<TInt>.