=over 5
-L<Compiling your C program>
+=item *
-L<Adding a Perl interpreter to your C program>
+Compiling your C program
-L<Calling a Perl subroutine from your C program>
+=item *
-L<Evaluating a Perl statement from your C program>
+Adding a Perl interpreter to your C program
-L<Performing Perl pattern matches and substitutions from your C program>
+=item *
-L<Fiddling with the Perl stack from your C program>
+Calling a Perl subroutine from your C program
-L<Maintaining a persistent interpreter>
+=item *
-L<Maintaining multiple interpreter instances>
+Evaluating a Perl statement from your C program
-L<Using Perl modules, which themselves use C libraries, from your C program>
+=item *
-L<Embedding Perl under Win32>
+Performing Perl pattern matches and substitutions from your C program
+
+=item *
+
+Fiddling with the Perl stack from your C program
+
+=item *
+
+Maintaining a persistent interpreter
+
+=item *
+
+Maintaining multiple interpreter instances
+
+=item *
+
+Using Perl modules, which themselves use C libraries, from your C program
+
+=item *
+
+Embedding Perl under Win32
=back
If you want to pass arguments to the Perl subroutine, you can add
strings to the C<NULL>-terminated C<args> list passed to
I<call_argv>. For other data types, or to examine return values,
-you'll need to manipulate the Perl stack. That's demonstrated in the
-last section of this document: L<Fiddling with the Perl stack from
-your C program>.
+you'll need to manipulate the Perl stack. That's demonstrated in
+L<Fiddling with the Perl stack from your C program>.
=head2 Evaluating a Perl statement from your C program
Consult L<perlxs>, L<perlguts>, and L<perlapi> for more details.
-=head1 Embedding Perl under Windows
+=head1 Embedding Perl under Win32
In general, all of the source code shown here should work unmodified under
Windows.