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Home/ Questions/Q 8014331
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 4, 20262026-06-04T19:54:06+00:00 2026-06-04T19:54:06+00:00

So let’s say I have a string containing some code in C, predictably read

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So let’s say I have a string containing some code in C, predictably read from a file that has other things in it besides normal C code. How would I turn this string into code usable by the program? Do I have to write an entire interpreter, or is there a library that already does this for me? The code in question may call subroutines that I declared in my actual C file, so one that only accounts for stock C commands may not work.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-04T19:54:07+00:00Added an answer on June 4, 2026 at 7:54 pm

    Whoo. With C this is actually pretty hard.

    You’ve basically got a couple of options:

    interpret the code

    To do this, you’ll hae to write an interpreter, and interpreting C is a fairly hard problem. There have been C interpreters available in the past, but I haven’t read about one recently. In any case, unless you reallY really need this, writing your own interpreter is a big project.

    Googling does show a couple of open-source (partial) C interpreters, like picoc

    compile and dynamically load

    If you can capture the code and wrap it so it makes a syntactically complete C source file, then you can compile it into a C dynamically loadable library: a DLL in Windows, or a .so in more variants of UNIX. Then you could load the result at runtime.

    Now, what normally would lead someone to do this is a need to be able to express some complicated scripting functions. Have you considered the possibility of using a different language? Python, Scheme (guile) and Lua are easily available to add as a scripting language to a C application.

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