Mercurial > pidgin
view libpurple/purple-client-example.c @ 30181:e9001aa49be8
Very hackily implement a fallback mechanism in Yahoo, but not for Yahoo Japan
because we don't know hosts we can fall back to there yet. This fallback
mechanism just blindly connects to scsa.msg.yahoo.com if the HTTP-based CS
lookup fails. I guarantee this will break in the future. Refs #11986.
author | John Bailey <rekkanoryo@rekkanoryo.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 13 Jun 2010 23:07:24 +0000 |
parents | 48d09d62912e |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
#ifndef DBUS_API_SUBJECT_TO_CHANGE #define DBUS_API_SUBJECT_TO_CHANGE #endif #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include "purple-client.h" /* This example demonstrates how to use libpurple-client to communicate with purple. The names and signatures of functions provided by libpurple-client are the same as those in purple. However, all structures (such as PurpleAccount) are opaque, that is, you can only use pointer to them. In fact, these pointers DO NOT actually point to anything, they are just integer identifiers of assigned to these structures by purple. So NEVER try to dereference these pointers. Integer ids as disguised as pointers to provide type checking and prevent mistakes such as passing an id of PurpleAccount when an id of PurpleBuddy is expected. According to glib manual, this technique is portable. */ int main (int argc, char **argv) { GList *alist, *node; purple_init(); alist = purple_accounts_get_all(); for (node = alist; node != NULL; node = node->next) { PurpleAccount *account = (PurpleAccount*) node->data; char *name = purple_account_get_username(account); g_print("Name: %s\n", name); g_free(name); } g_list_free(alist); return 0; }