Lua

Lua is an ergonomic interface to Luerl, aiming to be the best way to use Luerl from Elixir.

Features

Lua the Elixir library vs Lua the language {: .info}

When referring to this library, Lua will be stylized as a link.

References to Lua the language will be in plaintext and not linked.

Executing Lua

Lua can be run using the eval!/2 function

iex> {[4], _} =
...> Lua.eval!(~LUA"""
...> return 2 + 2
...> """)

Exposing Elixir functions to Lua

The simplest way to expose an Elixir function to Lua is using the Lua.set!/3 function

lua =
Lua.set!(Lua.new(), [:sum], fn args ->
[Enum.sum(args)]
end)
{[10], _} = Lua.eval!(lua, ~LUA"return sum(1, 2, 3, 4)"c)

For easily expressing APIs, Lua provides the deflua macro for exposing Elixir functions to Lua

defmodule MyAPI do
use Lua.API
deflua double(v), do: 2 * v
end
lua = Lua.new() |> Lua.load_api(MyAPI)
{[10], _} =
Lua.eval!(lua, ~LUA"""
return double(5)
""")

Calling Lua functions from Elixir

Lua can be used to expose complex functions written in Elixir. In some cases, you may want to call Lua functions from Elixir. This can be achieved with the Lua.call_function!/3 function

defmodule MyAPI do
use Lua.API, scope: "example"
deflua foo(value), state do
Lua.call_function!(state, [:string, :lower], [value])
end
end
lua = Lua.new() |> Lua.load_api(MyAPI)
{["wow"], _} = Lua.eval!(lua, ~LUA"return example.foo(\"WOW\")")

Modify Lua state from Elixir

You can also use Lua to modify the state of the lua environment inside your Elixir code. Imagine you have a queue module that you want to implement in Elixir, with the queue stored in a global variable

defmodule Queue do
use Lua.API, scope: "q"
deflua push(v), state do
# Pull out the global variable "my_queue" from lua
queue = Lua.get!(state, [:my_queue])
# Call the Lua function table.insert(table, value)
{[], state} = Lua.call_function!(state, [:table, :insert], [queue, v])
# Return the modified lua state with no return values
{[], state}
end
end
lua = Lua.new() |> Lua.load_api(Queue)
{[queue], _} =
Lua.eval!(lua, """
my_queue = {}
q.push("first")
q.push("second")
return my_queue
""")
["first", "second"] = Lua.Table.as_list(queue)

Credits

Lua piggy-backs off of Robert Virding's Luerl project, which implements a Lua lexer, parser, and full-blown Lua virtual machine that runs inside the BEAM.