| \documentstyle[twoside,11pt,myformat]{report} |
| |
| \title{\bf Extending and Embedding the Python Interpreter} |
| |
| \author{ |
| Guido van Rossum \\ |
| Dept. CST, CWI, Kruislaan 413 \\ |
| 1098 SJ Amsterdam, The Netherlands \\ |
| E-mail: {\tt guido@cwi.nl} |
| } |
| |
| % Tell \index to actually write the .idx file |
| \makeindex |
| |
| \begin{document} |
| |
| \pagenumbering{roman} |
| |
| \maketitle |
| |
| \begin{abstract} |
| |
| \noindent |
| This document describes how you can extend the Python interpreter with |
| new modules written in C or C++. It also describes how to use the |
| interpreter as a library package from applications using Python as an |
| ``embedded'' language. |
| |
| \end{abstract} |
| |
| \pagebreak |
| |
| { |
| \parskip = 0mm |
| \tableofcontents |
| } |
| |
| \pagebreak |
| |
| \pagenumbering{arabic} |
| |
| \chapter{Extending Python with C or C++ code} |
| |
| It is quite easy to add non-standard built-in modules to Python, if |
| you know how to program in C. A built-in module known to the Python |
| programmer as foo is generally implemented in a file called |
| foomodule.c. The standard built-in modules also adhere to this |
| convention, and in fact some of them form excellent examples of how to |
| create an extension. |
| |
| Extension modules can do two things that can't be done directly in |
| Python: implement new data types and provide access to system calls or |
| C library functions. Since the latter is usually the most important |
| reason for adding an extension, I'll concentrate on adding "wrappers" |
| around C library functions; the concrete example uses the wrapper for |
| system() in module posix, found in (of course) the file posixmodule.c. |
| |
| It is important not to be impressed by the size and complexity of |
| the average extension module; much of this is straightforward |
| "boilerplate" code (starting right with the copyright notice!). |
| |
| Let's skip the boilerplate and jump right to an interesting function: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| static object * |
| posix_system(self, args) |
| object *self; |
| object *args; |
| { |
| char *command; |
| int sts; |
| if (!getargs(args, "s", &command)) |
| return NULL; |
| sts = system(command); |
| return newintobject((long)sts); |
| } |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| This is the prototypical top-level function in an extension module. |
| It will be called (we'll see later how this is made possible) when the |
| Python program executes statements like |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> import posix |
| >>> sts = posix.system('ls -l') |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| There is a straightforward translation from the arguments to the call |
| in Python (here the single value 'ls -l') to the arguments that are |
| passed to the C function. The C function always has two parameters, |
| conventionally named 'self' and 'args'. In this example, 'self' will |
| always be a NULL pointer, since this is a function, not a method (this |
| is done so that the interpreter doesn't have to understand two |
| different types of C functions). |
| |
| The 'args' parameter will be a pointer to a Python object, or NULL if |
| the Python function/method was called without arguments. It is |
| necessary to do full argument type checking on each call, since |
| otherwise the Python user could cause a core dump by passing the wrong |
| arguments (or no arguments at all). Because argument checking and |
| converting arguments to C is such a common task, there's a general |
| function in the Python interpreter which combines these tasks: |
| getargs(). It uses a template string to determine both the types of |
| the Python argument and the types of the C variables into which it |
| should store the converted values. |
| |
| When getargs returns nonzero, the argument list has the right type and |
| its components have been stored in the variables whose addresses are |
| passed. When it returns zero, an error has occurred. In the latter |
| case it has already raised an appropriate exception by calling |
| err_setstr(), so the calling function can just return NULL. |
| |
| The form of the format string is described at the end of this file. |
| (There are convenience macros getstrarg(), getintarg(), etc., for many |
| common forms of argument lists. These are relics from the past; it's |
| better to call getargs() directly.) |
| |
| |
| \section{Intermezzo: errors and exceptions} |
| |
| An important convention throughout the Python interpreter is the |
| following: when a function fails, it should set an exception condition |
| and return an error value (often a NULL pointer). Exceptions are set |
| in a global variable in the file errors.c; if this variable is NULL no |
| exception has occurred. A second variable is the "associated value" |
| of the exception. |
| |
| The file errors.h declares a host of err_* functions to set various |
| types of exceptions. The most common one is err_setstr() -- its |
| arguments are an exception object (e.g. RuntimeError -- actually it |
| can be any string object) and a C string indicating the cause of the |
| error (this is converted to a string object and stored as the |
| "associated value" of the exception). Another useful function is |
| err_errno(), which only takes an exception argument and constructs the |
| associated value by inspection of the (UNIX) global variable errno. |
| |
| You can test non-destructively whether an exception has been set with |
| err_occurred(). However, most code never calls err_occurred() to see |
| whether an error occurred or not, but relies on error return values |
| from the functions it calls instead: |
| |
| When a function that calls another function detects that the called |
| function fails, it should return an error value but not set an |
| condition -- one is already set. The caller is then supposed to also |
| return an error indication to *its* caller, again *without* calling |
| err_setstr(), and so on -- the most detailed cause of the error was |
| already reported by the function that detected it in the first place. |
| Once the error has reached Python's interpreter main loop, this aborts |
| the currently executing Python code and tries to find an exception |
| handler specified by the Python programmer. |
| |
| To ignore an exception set by a function call that failed, the |
| exception condition must be cleared explicitly by calling err_clear(). |
| The only time C code should call err_clear() is if it doesn't want to |
| pass the error on to the interpreter but wants to handle it completely |
| by itself (e.g. by trying something else or pretending nothing |
| happened). |
| |
| Finally, the function err_get() gives you both error variables |
| *and clears them*. Note that even if an error occurred the second one |
| may be NULL. I doubt you will need to use this function. |
| |
| Note that a failing malloc() call must also be turned into an |
| exception -- the direct caller of malloc() (or realloc()) must call |
| err_nomem() and return a failure indicator itself. All the |
| object-creating functions (newintobject() etc.) already do this, so |
| only if you call malloc() directly this note is of importance. |
| |
| Also note that, with the important exception of getargs(), functions |
| that return an integer status usually use 0 for success and -1 for |
| failure. |
| |
| Finally, be careful about cleaning up garbage (making appropriate |
| [X]DECREF() calls) when you return an error! |
| |
| |
| \section{Back to the example} |
| |
| Going back to posix_system, you should now be able to understand this |
| bit: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| if (!getargs(args, "s", &command)) |
| return NULL; |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| It returns NULL (the error indicator for functions of this kind) if an |
| error is detected in the argument list, relying on the exception set |
| by getargs(). The string value of the argument is now copied to the |
| local variable 'command'. |
| |
| If a Python function is called with multiple arguments, the argument |
| list is turned into a tuple. Python programs can us this feature, for |
| instance, to explicitly create the tuple containing the arguments |
| first and make the call later. |
| |
| The next statement in posix_system is a call tothe C library function |
| system(), passing it the string we just got from getargs(): |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| sts = system(command); |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Python strings may contain internal null bytes; but if these occur in |
| this example the rest of the string will be ignored by system(). |
| |
| Finally, posix.system() must return a value: the integer status |
| returned by the C library system() function. This is done by the |
| function newintobject(), which takes a (long) integer as parameter. |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| return newintobject((long)sts); |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| (Yes, even integers are represented as objects on the heap in Python!) |
| If you had a function that returned no useful argument, you would need |
| this idiom: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| INCREF(None); |
| return None; |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| 'None' is a unique Python object representing 'no value'. It differs |
| from NULL, which means 'error' in most contexts (except when passed as |
| a function argument -- there it means 'no arguments'). |
| |
| |
| \section{The module's function table} |
| |
| I promised to show how I made the function posix_system() available to |
| Python programs. This is shown later in posixmodule.c: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| static struct methodlist posix_methods[] = { |
| ... |
| {"system", posix_system}, |
| ... |
| {NULL, NULL} /* Sentinel */ |
| }; |
| |
| void |
| initposix() |
| { |
| (void) initmodule("posix", posix_methods); |
| } |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| (The actual initposix() is somewhat more complicated, but most |
| extension modules are indeed as simple as that.) When the Python |
| program first imports module 'posix', initposix() is called, which |
| calls initmodule() with specific parameters. This creates a module |
| object (which is inserted in the table sys.modules under the key |
| 'posix'), and adds built-in-function objects to the newly created |
| module based upon the table (of type struct methodlist) that was |
| passed as its second parameter. The function initmodule() returns a |
| pointer to the module object that it creates, but this is unused here. |
| It aborts with a fatal error if the module could not be initialized |
| satisfactorily. |
| |
| |
| \section{Calling the module initialization function} |
| |
| There is one more thing to do: telling the Python module to call the |
| initfoo() function when it encounters an 'import foo' statement. |
| This is done in the file config.c. This file contains a table mapping |
| module names to parameterless void function pointers. You need to add |
| a declaration of initfoo() somewhere early in the file, and a line |
| saying |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| {"foo", initfoo}, |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| to the initializer for inittab[]. It is conventional to include both |
| the declaration and the initializer line in preprocessor commands |
| \verb\#ifdef USE_FOO\ / \verb\#endif\, to make it easy to turn the foo |
| extension on or off. Note that the Macintosh version uses a different |
| configuration file, distributed as configmac.c. This strategy may be |
| extended to other operating system versions, although usually the |
| standard config.c file gives a pretty useful starting point for a new |
| config*.c file. |
| |
| And, of course, I forgot the Makefile. This is actually not too hard, |
| just follow the examples for, say, AMOEBA. Just find all occurrences |
| of the string AMOEBA in the Makefile and do the same for FOO that's |
| done for AMOEBA... |
| |
| (Note: if you are using dynamic loading for your extension, you don't |
| need to edit config.c and the Makefile. See "./DYNLOAD" for more info |
| about this.) |
| |
| |
| \section{Calling Python functions from C} |
| |
| The above concentrates on making C functions accessible to the Python |
| programmer. The reverse is also often useful: calling Python |
| functions from C. This is especially the case for libraries that |
| support so-called "callback" functions. If a C interface makes heavy |
| use of callbacks, the equivalent Python often needs to provide a |
| callback mechanism to the Python programmer; the implementation may |
| require calling the Python callback functions from a C callback. |
| Other uses are also possible. |
| |
| Fortunately, the Python interpreter is easily called recursively, and |
| there is a standard interface to call a Python function. I won't |
| dwell on how to call the Python parser with a particular string as |
| input -- if you're interested, have a look at the implementation of |
| the "-c" command line option in pythonmain.c. |
| |
| Calling a Python function is easy. First, the Python program must |
| somehow pass you the Python function object. You should provide a |
| function (or some other interface) to do this. When this function is |
| called, save a pointer to the Python function object (be careful to |
| INCREF it!) in a global variable -- or whereever you see fit. |
| For example, the following function might be part of a module |
| definition: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| static object *my_callback; |
| |
| static object * |
| my_set_callback(dummy, arg) |
| object *dummy, *arg; |
| { |
| XDECREF(my_callback); /* Dispose of previous callback */ |
| my_callback = arg; |
| XINCREF(my_callback); /* Remember new callback */ |
| /* Boilerplate for "void" return */ |
| INCREF(None); |
| return None; |
| } |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Later, when it is time to call the function, you call the C function |
| call_object(). This function has two arguments, both pointers to |
| arbitrary Python objects: the Python function, and the argument. The |
| argument can be NULL to call the function without arguments. For |
| example: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| object *result; |
| ... |
| /* Time to call the callback */ |
| result = call_object(my_callback, (object *)NULL); |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| call_object() returns a Python object pointer: this is |
| the return value of the Python function. call_object() is |
| "reference-count-neutral" with respect to its arguments, but the |
| return value is "new": either it is a brand new object, or it is an |
| existing object whose reference count has been incremented. So, you |
| should somehow apply DECREF to the result, even (especially!) if you |
| are not interested in its value. |
| |
| Before you do this, however, it is important to check that the return |
| value isn't NULL. If it is, the Python function terminated by raising |
| an exception. If the C code that called call_object() is called from |
| Python, it should now return an error indication to its Python caller, |
| so the interpreter can print a stack trace, or the calling Python code |
| can handle the exception. If this is not possible or desirable, the |
| exception should be cleared by calling err_clear(). For example: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| if (result == NULL) |
| return NULL; /* Pass error back */ |
| /* Here maybe use the result */ |
| DECREF(result); |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Depending on the desired interface to the Python callback function, |
| you may also have to provide an argument to call_object(). In some |
| cases the argument is also provided by the Python program, through the |
| same interface that specified the callback function. It can then be |
| saved and used in the same manner as the function object. In other |
| cases, you may have to construct a new object to pass as argument. In |
| this case you must dispose of it as well. For example, if you want to |
| pass an integral event code, you might use the following code: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| object *argument; |
| ... |
| argument = newintobject((long)eventcode); |
| result = call_object(my_callback, argument); |
| DECREF(argument); |
| if (result == NULL) |
| return NULL; /* Pass error back */ |
| /* Here maybe use the result */ |
| DECREF(result); |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Note the placement of DECREF(argument) immediately after the call, |
| before the error check! Also note that strictly spoken this code is |
| not complete: newintobject() may run out of memory, and this should be |
| checked. |
| |
| In even more complicated cases you may want to pass the callback |
| function multiple arguments. To this end you have to construct (and |
| dispose of!) a tuple object. Details (mostly concerned with the |
| errror checks and reference count manipulation) are left as an |
| exercise for the reader; most of this is also needed when returning |
| multiple values from a function. |
| |
| XXX TO DO: explain objects and reference counting. |
| XXX TO DO: defining new object types. |
| |
| |
| \section{Format strings for getargs()} |
| |
| The getargs() function is declared in "modsupport.h" as follows: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| int getargs(object *arg, char *format, ...); |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| The remaining arguments must be addresses of variables whose type is |
| determined by the format string. For the conversion to succeed, the |
| `arg' object must match the format and the format must be exhausted. |
| Note that while getargs() checks that the Python object really is of |
| the specified type, it cannot check that the addresses provided in the |
| call match: if you make mistakes there, your code will probably dump |
| core. |
| |
| A format string consists of a single `format unit'. A format unit |
| describes one Python object; it is usually a single character or a |
| parenthesized string. The type of a format units is determined from |
| its first character, the `format letter': |
| |
| 's' (string) |
| The Python object must be a string object. The C argument |
| must be a char** (i.e., the address of a character pointer), |
| and a pointer to the C string contained in the Python object |
| is stored into it. If the next character in the format string |
| is \verb\'#'\, another C argument of type int* must be present, and |
| the length of the Python string (not counting the trailing |
| zero byte) is stored into it. |
| |
| 'z' (string or zero, i.e., NULL) |
| Like 's', but the object may also be None. In this case the |
| string pointer is set to NULL and if a \verb\'#'\ is present the size |
| it set to 0. |
| |
| 'b' (byte, i.e., char interpreted as tiny int) |
| The object must be a Python integer. The C argument must be a |
| char*. |
| |
| 'h' (half, i.e., short) |
| The object must be a Python integer. The C argument must be a |
| short*. |
| |
| 'i' (int) |
| The object must be a Python integer. The C argument must be |
| an int*. |
| |
| 'l' (long) |
| The object must be a (plain!) Python integer. The C argument |
| must be a long*. |
| |
| 'c' (char) |
| The Python object must be a string of length 1. The C |
| argument must be a char*. (Don't pass an int*!) |
| |
| 'f' (float) |
| The object must be a Python int or float. The C argument must |
| be a float*. |
| |
| 'd' (double) |
| The object must be a Python int or float. The C argument must |
| be a double*. |
| |
| 'S' (string object) |
| The object must be a Python string. The C argument must be an |
| object** (i.e., the address of an object pointer). The C |
| program thus gets back the actual string object that was |
| passed, not just a pointer to its array of characters and its |
| size as for format character 's'. |
| |
| 'O' (object) |
| The object can be any Python object, including None, but not |
| NULL. The C argument must be an object**. This can be used |
| if an argument list must contain objects of a type for which |
| no format letter exist: the caller must then check that it has |
| the right type. |
| |
| '(' (tuple) |
| The object must be a Python tuple. Following the '(' |
| character in the format string must come a number of format |
| units describing the elements of the tuple, followed by a ')' |
| character. Tuple format units may be nested. (There are no |
| exceptions for empty and singleton tuples; "()" specifies an |
| empty tuple and "(i)" a singleton of one integer. Normally |
| you don't want to use the latter, since it is hard for the |
| user to specify. |
| |
| |
| More format characters will probably be added as the need arises. It |
| should be allowed to use Python long integers whereever integers are |
| expected, and perform a range check. (A range check is in fact always |
| necessary for the 'b', 'h' and 'i' format letters, but this is |
| currently not implemented.) |
| |
| |
| Some example calls: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| int ok; |
| int i, j; |
| long k, l; |
| char *s; |
| int size; |
| |
| ok = getargs(args, "(lls)", &k, &l, &s); /* Two longs and a string */ |
| /* Possible Python call: f(1, 2, 'three') */ |
| |
| ok = getargs(args, "s", &s); /* A string */ |
| /* Possible Python call: f('whoops!') */ |
| |
| ok = getargs(args, ""); /* No arguments */ |
| /* Python call: f() */ |
| |
| ok = getargs(args, "((ii)s#)", &i, &j, &s, &size); |
| /* A pair of ints and a string, whose size is also returned */ |
| /* Possible Python call: f(1, 2, 'three') */ |
| |
| { |
| int left, top, right, bottom, h, v; |
| ok = getargs(args, "(((ii)(ii))(ii))", |
| &left, &top, &right, &bottom, &h, &v); |
| /* A rectangle and a point */ |
| /* Possible Python call: |
| f( ((0, 0), (400, 300)), (10, 10)) */ |
| } |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Note that a format string must consist of a single unit; strings like |
| \verb\'is'\ and \verb\'(ii)s#'\ are not valid format strings. (But |
| \verb\'s#'\ is.) |
| |
| |
| The getargs() function does not support variable-length argument |
| lists. In simple cases you can fake these by trying several calls to |
| getargs() until one succeeds, but you must take care to call |
| err_clear() before each retry. For example: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| static object *my_method(self, args) object *self, *args; { |
| int i, j, k; |
| |
| if (getargs(args, "(ii)", &i, &j)) { |
| k = 0; /* Use default third argument */ |
| } |
| else { |
| err_clear(); |
| if (!getargs(args, "(iii)", &i, &j, &k)) |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| /* ... use i, j and k here ... */ |
| INCREF(None); |
| return None; |
| } |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| (It is possible to think of an extension to the definition of format |
| strings to accomodate this directly, e.g., placing a '|' in a tuple |
| might specify that the remaining arguments are optional. getargs() |
| should then return 1 + the number of variables stored into.) |
| |
| |
| Advanced users note: If you set the `varargs' flag in the method list |
| for a function, the argument will always be a tuple (the `raw argument |
| list'). In this case you must enclose single and empty argument lists |
| in parentheses, e.g., "(s)" and "()". |
| |
| |
| \section{The mkvalue() function} |
| |
| This function is the counterpart to getargs(). It is declared in |
| "modsupport.h" as follows: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| object *mkvalue(char *format, ...); |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| It supports exactly the same format letters as getargs(), but the |
| arguments (which are input to the function, not output) must not be |
| pointers, just values. If a byte, short or float is passed to a |
| varargs function, it is widened by the compiler to int or double, so |
| 'b' and 'h' are treated as 'i' and 'f' is treated as 'd'. 'S' is |
| treated as 'O', 's' is treated as 'z'. \verb\'z#'\ and \verb\'s#'\ |
| are supported: a second argument specifies the length of the data |
| (negative means use strlen()). 'S' and 'O' add a reference to their |
| argument (so you should DECREF it if you've just created it and aren't |
| going to use it again). |
| |
| If the argument for 'O' or 'S' is a NULL pointer, it is assumed that |
| this was caused because the call producing the argument found an error |
| and set an exception. Therefore, mkvalue() will return NULL but won't |
| set an exception if one is already set. If no exception is set, |
| SystemError is set. |
| |
| If there is an error in the format string, the SystemError exception |
| is set, since it is the calling C code's fault, not that of the Python |
| user who sees the exception. |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| return mkvalue("(ii)", 0, 0); |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| returns a tuple containing two zeros. (Outer parentheses in the |
| format string are actually superfluous, but you can use them for |
| compatibility with getargs(), which requires them if more than one |
| argument is expected.) |
| |
| \section{Reference counts} |
| |
| Here's a useful explanation of INCREF and DECREF by Sjoerd Mullender. |
| |
| Use XINCREF or XDECREF instead of INCREF/DECREF when the argument may |
| be NULL. |
| |
| The basic idea is, if you create an extra reference to an object, you |
| must INCREF it, if you throw away a reference to an object, you must |
| DECREF it. Functions such as newstringobject, newsizedstringobject, |
| newintobject, etc. create a reference to an object. If you want to |
| throw away the object thus created, you must use DECREF. |
| |
| If you put an object into a tuple, list, or dictionary, the idea is |
| that you usually don't want to keep a reference of your own around, so |
| Python does not INCREF the elements. It does DECREF the old value. |
| This means that if you put something into such an object using the |
| functions Python provides for this, you must INCREF the object if you |
| want to keep a separate reference to the object around. Also, if you |
| replace an element, you should INCREF the old element first if you |
| want to keep it. If you didn't INCREF it before you replaced it, you |
| are not allowed to look at it anymore, since it may have been freed. |
| |
| Returning an object to Python (i.e., when your module function |
| returns) creates a reference to an object, but it does not change the |
| reference count. When your module does not keep another reference to |
| the object, you should not INCREF or DECREF it. When you do keep a |
| reference around, you should INCREF the object. Also, when you return |
| a global object such as None, you should INCREF it. |
| |
| If you want to return a tuple, you should consider using mkvalue. |
| Mkvalue creates a new tuple with a reference count of 1 which you can |
| return. If any of the elements you put into the tuple are objects, |
| they are INCREFfed by mkvalue. If you don't want to keep references |
| to those elements around, you should DECREF them after having called |
| mkvalue. |
| |
| Usually you don't have to worry about arguments. They are INCREFfed |
| before your function is called and DECREFfed after your function |
| returns. When you keep a reference to an argument, you should INCREF |
| it and DECREF when you throw it away. Also, when you return an |
| argument, you should INCREF it, because returning the argument creates |
| an extra reference to it. |
| |
| If you use getargs() to parse the arguments, you can get a reference |
| to an object (by using "O" in the format string). This object was not |
| INCREFfed, so you should not DECREF it. If you want to keep the |
| object, you must INCREF it yourself. |
| |
| If you create your own type of objects, you should use NEWOBJ to |
| create the object. This sets the reference count to 1. If you want |
| to throw away the object, you should use DECREF. When the reference |
| count reaches 0, the dealloc function is called. In it, you should |
| DECREF all object to which you keep references in your object, but you |
| should not use DECREF on your object. You should use DEL instead. |
| |
| \chapter{Embedding Python in another application} |
| |
| Embedding Python is similar to extending it, but not quite. The |
| difference is that when you extend Python, the main program of the |
| application is still the Python interpreter, while of you embed |
| Python, the main program may have nothing to do with Python -- |
| instead, some parts of the application occasionally call the Python |
| interpreter to run some Python code. |
| |
| So if you are embedding Python, you are providing your own main |
| program. One of the things this main program has to do is initialize |
| the Python interpreter. At the very least, you have to call the |
| function initall(). There are optional calls to pass command line |
| arguments to Python. Then later you can call the interpreter from any |
| part of the application. |
| |
| There are several different ways to call the interpreter: you can pass |
| a string containing Python statements to run_command(), or you can |
| pass a stdio file pointer and a file name (for identification in error |
| messages only) to run_script(). You can also call the lower-level |
| operations described (partly) in the file \verb\<pythonroot>/misc/EXTENDING\ |
| to construct and use Python objects. |
| |
| A simple demo of embedding Python can be found in the directory |
| \verb\<pythonroot>/embed/\. |
| |
| \section{Using C++} |
| |
| It is also possible to embed Python in a C++ program; how this is done |
| exactly will depend on the details of the C++ system used; in general |
| you will need to write the main program in C++, enclosing the include |
| files in \verb\"extern "C" { ... }"\, and compile and link this with |
| the C++ compiler. (There is no need to recompile Python itself with |
| C++.) |
| |
| \input{ext.ind} |
| |
| \end{document} |