Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format (grpc依赖) https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/
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Jon Skeet 5f7b68eb6f Modified addressbook example with new options 17 years ago
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AddPerson.java Initial commit of C# code developed before installing Git. 17 years ago
ListPeople.java Initial commit of C# code developed before installing Git. 17 years ago
Makefile Initial commit of C# code developed before installing Git. 17 years ago
README.txt Initial commit of C# code developed before installing Git. 17 years ago
add_person.cc Initial commit of C# code developed before installing Git. 17 years ago
add_person.py Initial commit of C# code developed before installing Git. 17 years ago
addressbook.proto Modified addressbook example with new options 17 years ago
list_people.cc Initial commit of C# code developed before installing Git. 17 years ago
list_people.py Initial commit of C# code developed before installing Git. 17 years ago

README.txt

This directory contains example code that uses Protocol Buffers to manage an
address book. Two programs are provided, each with three different
implementations, one written in each of C++, Java, and Python. The add_person
example adds a new person to an address book, prompting the user to input
the person's information. The list_people example lists people already in the
address book. The examples use the exact same format in all three languages,
so you can, for example, use add_person_java to create an address book and then
use list_people_python to read it.

You must install the protobuf package before you can build these.

To build all the examples (on a unix-like system), simply run "make". This
creates the following executable files in the current directory:
add_person_cpp list_people_cpp
add_person_java list_people_java
add_person_python list_people_python

If you only want to compile examples in one language, use "make cpp",
"make java", or "make python".

All of these programs simply take an address book file as their parameter.
The add_person programs will create the file if it doesn't already exist.

These examples are part of the Protocol Buffers tutorial, located at:
http://code.google.com/apis/protocolbuffers/docs/tutorials.html