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Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001\chapter{Concrete Objects Layer \label{concrete}}
2
3
4The functions in this chapter are specific to certain Python object
5types. Passing them an object of the wrong type is not a good idea;
6if you receive an object from a Python program and you are not sure
7that it has the right type, you must perform a type check first;
8for example, to check that an object is a dictionary, use
9\cfunction{PyDict_Check()}. The chapter is structured like the
10``family tree'' of Python object types.
11
12\warning{While the functions described in this chapter carefully check
13the type of the objects which are passed in, many of them do not check
14for \NULL{} being passed instead of a valid object. Allowing \NULL{}
15to be passed in can cause memory access violations and immediate
16termination of the interpreter.}
17
18
19\section{Fundamental Objects \label{fundamental}}
20
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +000021This section describes Python type objects and the singleton object
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +000022\code{None}.
23
24
25\subsection{Type Objects \label{typeObjects}}
26
27\obindex{type}
28\begin{ctypedesc}{PyTypeObject}
29 The C structure of the objects used to describe built-in types.
30\end{ctypedesc}
31
32\begin{cvardesc}{PyObject*}{PyType_Type}
33 This is the type object for type objects; it is the same object as
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +000034 \code{type} and \code{types.TypeType} in the Python layer.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +000035 \withsubitem{(in module types)}{\ttindex{TypeType}}
36\end{cvardesc}
37
38\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyType_Check}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +000039 Return true if the object \var{o} is a type object, including
40 instances of types derived from the standard type object. Return
Fred Drakee3c764b2002-04-10 17:52:52 +000041 false in all other cases.
42\end{cfuncdesc}
43
44\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyType_CheckExact}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +000045 Return true if the object \var{o} is a type object, but not a
46 subtype of the standard type object. Return false in all other
Fred Drakee3c764b2002-04-10 17:52:52 +000047 cases.
48 \versionadded{2.2}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +000049\end{cfuncdesc}
50
51\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyType_HasFeature}{PyObject *o, int feature}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +000052 Return true if the type object \var{o} sets the feature
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +000053 \var{feature}. Type features are denoted by single bit flags.
54\end{cfuncdesc}
55
Fred Drakee3c764b2002-04-10 17:52:52 +000056\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyType_IS_GC}{PyObject *o}
57 Return true if the type object includes support for the cycle
58 detector; this tests the type flag \constant{Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_GC}.
59 \versionadded{2.0}
60\end{cfuncdesc}
61
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +000062\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyType_IsSubtype}{PyTypeObject *a, PyTypeObject *b}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +000063 Return true if \var{a} is a subtype of \var{b}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +000064 \versionadded{2.2}
65\end{cfuncdesc}
66
67\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyType_GenericAlloc}{PyTypeObject *type,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +000068 Py_ssize_t nitems}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +000069 \versionadded{2.2}
70\end{cfuncdesc}
71
72\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyType_GenericNew}{PyTypeObject *type,
73 PyObject *args, PyObject *kwds}
74 \versionadded{2.2}
75\end{cfuncdesc}
76
77\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyType_Ready}{PyTypeObject *type}
Fred Drake28de8d42002-04-12 16:15:10 +000078 Finalize a type object. This should be called on all type objects
79 to finish their initialization. This function is responsible for
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +000080 adding inherited slots from a type's base class. Return \code{0}
81 on success, or return \code{-1} and sets an exception on error.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +000082 \versionadded{2.2}
83\end{cfuncdesc}
84
85
86\subsection{The None Object \label{noneObject}}
87
Fred Drake7a700b82004-01-01 05:43:53 +000088\obindex{None}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +000089Note that the \ctype{PyTypeObject} for \code{None} is not directly
90exposed in the Python/C API. Since \code{None} is a singleton,
91testing for object identity (using \samp{==} in C) is sufficient.
92There is no \cfunction{PyNone_Check()} function for the same reason.
93
94\begin{cvardesc}{PyObject*}{Py_None}
95 The Python \code{None} object, denoting lack of value. This object
Fred Drake6ccdccd2002-03-12 20:12:54 +000096 has no methods. It needs to be treated just like any other object
97 with respect to reference counts.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +000098\end{cvardesc}
99
Brett Cannon35d83602003-11-09 04:15:30 +0000100\begin{csimplemacrodesc}{Py_RETURN_NONE}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000101 Properly handle returning \cdata{Py_None} from within a C function.
Brett Cannon35d83602003-11-09 04:15:30 +0000102\end{csimplemacrodesc}
103
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000104
105\section{Numeric Objects \label{numericObjects}}
106
107\obindex{numeric}
108
109
110\subsection{Plain Integer Objects \label{intObjects}}
111
112\obindex{integer}
113\begin{ctypedesc}{PyIntObject}
114 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} represents a Python integer
115 object.
116\end{ctypedesc}
117
118\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyInt_Type}
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +0000119 This instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} represents the Python plain
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +0000120 integer type. This is the same object as \code{int} and
121 \code{types.IntType}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000122 \withsubitem{(in modules types)}{\ttindex{IntType}}
123\end{cvardesc}
124
Andrew M. Kuchling4eb1a002004-08-07 20:19:24 +0000125\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyInt_Check}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000126 Return true if \var{o} is of type \cdata{PyInt_Type} or a subtype
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000127 of \cdata{PyInt_Type}.
128 \versionchanged[Allowed subtypes to be accepted]{2.2}
129\end{cfuncdesc}
130
Andrew M. Kuchling4eb1a002004-08-07 20:19:24 +0000131\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyInt_CheckExact}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000132 Return true if \var{o} is of type \cdata{PyInt_Type}, but not a
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000133 subtype of \cdata{PyInt_Type}.
134 \versionadded{2.2}
135\end{cfuncdesc}
136
Skip Montanaro1ff49a72003-02-03 05:13:24 +0000137\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyInt_FromString}{char *str, char **pend,
138 int base}
139 Return a new \ctype{PyIntObject} or \ctype{PyLongObject} based on the
140 string value in \var{str}, which is interpreted according to the radix in
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +0000141 \var{base}. If \var{pend} is non-\NULL{}, \code{*\var{pend}} will point to
Skip Montanaro1ff49a72003-02-03 05:13:24 +0000142 the first character in \var{str} which follows the representation of the
143 number. If \var{base} is \code{0}, the radix will be determined based on
144 the leading characters of \var{str}: if \var{str} starts with \code{'0x'}
145 or \code{'0X'}, radix 16 will be used; if \var{str} starts with
146 \code{'0'}, radix 8 will be used; otherwise radix 10 will be used. If
147 \var{base} is not \code{0}, it must be between \code{2} and \code{36},
148 inclusive. Leading spaces are ignored. If there are no digits,
149 \exception{ValueError} will be raised. If the string represents a number
150 too large to be contained within the machine's \ctype{long int} type and
151 overflow warnings are being suppressed, a \ctype{PyLongObject} will be
152 returned. If overflow warnings are not being suppressed, \NULL{} will be
153 returned in this case.
154\end{cfuncdesc}
155
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000156\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyInt_FromLong}{long ival}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000157 Create a new integer object with a value of \var{ival}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000158
159 The current implementation keeps an array of integer objects for all
Thomas Wouters49fd7fa2006-04-21 10:40:58 +0000160 integers between \code{-5} and \code{256}, when you create an int in
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000161 that range you actually just get back a reference to the existing
162 object. So it should be possible to change the value of \code{1}. I
163 suspect the behaviour of Python in this case is undefined. :-)
164\end{cfuncdesc}
165
Martin v. Löwis3b197542006-03-01 05:47:11 +0000166\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyInt_FromSsize_t}{Py_ssize_t ival}
167 Create a new integer object with a value of \var{ival}.
168 If the value exceeds \code{LONG_MAX}, a long integer object is
169 returned.
170
171 \versionadded{2.5}
172\end{cfuncdesc}
173
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000174\begin{cfuncdesc}{long}{PyInt_AsLong}{PyObject *io}
175 Will first attempt to cast the object to a \ctype{PyIntObject}, if
Martin v. Löwis3b197542006-03-01 05:47:11 +0000176 it is not already one, and then return its value. If there is an
177 error, \code{-1} is returned, and the caller should check
178 \code{PyErr_Occurred()} to find out whether there was an error, or
179 whether the value just happened to be -1.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000180\end{cfuncdesc}
181
182\begin{cfuncdesc}{long}{PyInt_AS_LONG}{PyObject *io}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000183 Return the value of the object \var{io}. No error checking is
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000184 performed.
185\end{cfuncdesc}
186
Thomas Heller34d7f092003-04-23 19:51:05 +0000187\begin{cfuncdesc}{unsigned long}{PyInt_AsUnsignedLongMask}{PyObject *io}
188 Will first attempt to cast the object to a \ctype{PyIntObject} or
Fred Drakec22b2992003-04-23 20:38:41 +0000189 \ctype{PyLongObject}, if it is not already one, and then return its
Thomas Heller34d7f092003-04-23 19:51:05 +0000190 value as unsigned long. This function does not check for overflow.
191 \versionadded{2.3}
192\end{cfuncdesc}
193
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000194\begin{cfuncdesc}{unsigned PY_LONG_LONG}{PyInt_AsUnsignedLongLongMask}{PyObject *io}
Thomas Heller34d7f092003-04-23 19:51:05 +0000195 Will first attempt to cast the object to a \ctype{PyIntObject} or
Fred Drakec22b2992003-04-23 20:38:41 +0000196 \ctype{PyLongObject}, if it is not already one, and then return its
Thomas Heller34d7f092003-04-23 19:51:05 +0000197 value as unsigned long long, without checking for overflow.
198 \versionadded{2.3}
199\end{cfuncdesc}
200
Martin v. Löwis3b197542006-03-01 05:47:11 +0000201\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_ssize_t}{PyInt_AsSsize_t}{PyObject *io}
202 Will first attempt to cast the object to a \ctype{PyIntObject} or
203 \ctype{PyLongObject}, if it is not already one, and then return its
204 value as \ctype{Py_ssize_t}.
205 \versionadded{2.5}
206\end{cfuncdesc}
207
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000208\begin{cfuncdesc}{long}{PyInt_GetMax}{}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000209 Return the system's idea of the largest integer it can handle
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000210 (\constant{LONG_MAX}\ttindex{LONG_MAX}, as defined in the system
211 header files).
212\end{cfuncdesc}
213
Fred Drake2be406b2004-08-03 16:02:35 +0000214\subsection{Boolean Objects \label{boolObjects}}
Skip Montanaro33ee76a2004-07-28 14:17:04 +0000215
216Booleans in Python are implemented as a subclass of integers. There
217are only two booleans, \constant{Py_False} and \constant{Py_True}. As
218such, the normal creation and deletion functions don't apply to
219booleans. The following macros are available, however.
220
Andrew M. Kuchling4eb1a002004-08-07 20:19:24 +0000221\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyBool_Check}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000222 Return true if \var{o} is of type \cdata{PyBool_Type}.
Skip Montanaro33ee76a2004-07-28 14:17:04 +0000223 \versionadded{2.3}
224\end{cfuncdesc}
225
Skip Montanaro6d3db702004-07-29 02:16:04 +0000226\begin{cvardesc}{PyObject*}{Py_False}
227 The Python \code{False} object. This object has no methods. It needs to
228 be treated just like any other object with respect to reference counts.
229\end{cvardesc}
Skip Montanaro33ee76a2004-07-28 14:17:04 +0000230
Skip Montanaro6d3db702004-07-29 02:16:04 +0000231\begin{cvardesc}{PyObject*}{Py_True}
232 The Python \code{True} object. This object has no methods. It needs to
233 be treated just like any other object with respect to reference counts.
234\end{cvardesc}
235
236\begin{csimplemacrodesc}{Py_RETURN_FALSE}
237 Return \constant{Py_False} from a function, properly incrementing its
238 reference count.
239\versionadded{2.4}
240\end{csimplemacrodesc}
241
242\begin{csimplemacrodesc}{Py_RETURN_TRUE}
Andrew M. Kuchling4eb1a002004-08-07 20:19:24 +0000243 Return \constant{Py_True} from a function, properly incrementing its
244 reference count.
Skip Montanaro33ee76a2004-07-28 14:17:04 +0000245\versionadded{2.4}
Skip Montanaro6d3db702004-07-29 02:16:04 +0000246\end{csimplemacrodesc}
Skip Montanaro33ee76a2004-07-28 14:17:04 +0000247
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000248\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyBool_FromLong}{long v}
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +0000249 Return a new reference to \constant{Py_True} or \constant{Py_False}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000250 depending on the truth value of \var{v}.
Skip Montanaro33ee76a2004-07-28 14:17:04 +0000251\versionadded{2.3}
252\end{cfuncdesc}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000253
254\subsection{Long Integer Objects \label{longObjects}}
255
256\obindex{long integer}
257\begin{ctypedesc}{PyLongObject}
258 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} represents a Python long integer
259 object.
260\end{ctypedesc}
261
262\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyLong_Type}
263 This instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} represents the Python long
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +0000264 integer type. This is the same object as \code{long} and
265 \code{types.LongType}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000266 \withsubitem{(in modules types)}{\ttindex{LongType}}
267\end{cvardesc}
268
269\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyLong_Check}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000270 Return true if its argument is a \ctype{PyLongObject} or a subtype
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000271 of \ctype{PyLongObject}.
272 \versionchanged[Allowed subtypes to be accepted]{2.2}
273\end{cfuncdesc}
274
275\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyLong_CheckExact}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000276 Return true if its argument is a \ctype{PyLongObject}, but not a
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000277 subtype of \ctype{PyLongObject}.
278 \versionadded{2.2}
279\end{cfuncdesc}
280
281\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyLong_FromLong}{long v}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000282 Return a new \ctype{PyLongObject} object from \var{v}, or \NULL{}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000283 on failure.
284\end{cfuncdesc}
285
286\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyLong_FromUnsignedLong}{unsigned long v}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000287 Return a new \ctype{PyLongObject} object from a C \ctype{unsigned
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000288 long}, or \NULL{} on failure.
289\end{cfuncdesc}
290
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000291\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyLong_FromLongLong}{PY_LONG_LONG v}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000292 Return a new \ctype{PyLongObject} object from a C \ctype{long long},
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000293 or \NULL{} on failure.
294\end{cfuncdesc}
295
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000296\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyLong_FromUnsignedLongLong}{unsigned PY_LONG_LONG v}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000297 Return a new \ctype{PyLongObject} object from a C \ctype{unsigned
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000298 long long}, or \NULL{} on failure.
299\end{cfuncdesc}
300
301\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyLong_FromDouble}{double v}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000302 Return a new \ctype{PyLongObject} object from the integer part of
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000303 \var{v}, or \NULL{} on failure.
304\end{cfuncdesc}
305
306\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyLong_FromString}{char *str, char **pend,
307 int base}
308 Return a new \ctype{PyLongObject} based on the string value in
309 \var{str}, which is interpreted according to the radix in
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +0000310 \var{base}. If \var{pend} is non-\NULL{}, \code{*\var{pend}} will
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000311 point to the first character in \var{str} which follows the
312 representation of the number. If \var{base} is \code{0}, the radix
Skip Montanaro1ff49a72003-02-03 05:13:24 +0000313 will be determined based on the leading characters of \var{str}: if
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000314 \var{str} starts with \code{'0x'} or \code{'0X'}, radix 16 will be
315 used; if \var{str} starts with \code{'0'}, radix 8 will be used;
316 otherwise radix 10 will be used. If \var{base} is not \code{0}, it
317 must be between \code{2} and \code{36}, inclusive. Leading spaces
318 are ignored. If there are no digits, \exception{ValueError} will be
319 raised.
320\end{cfuncdesc}
321
322\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyLong_FromUnicode}{Py_UNICODE *u,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000323 Py_ssize_t length, int base}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000324 Convert a sequence of Unicode digits to a Python long integer
325 value. The first parameter, \var{u}, points to the first character
326 of the Unicode string, \var{length} gives the number of characters,
327 and \var{base} is the radix for the conversion. The radix must be
328 in the range [2, 36]; if it is out of range, \exception{ValueError}
329 will be raised.
330 \versionadded{1.6}
331\end{cfuncdesc}
332
333\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyLong_FromVoidPtr}{void *p}
334 Create a Python integer or long integer from the pointer \var{p}.
335 The pointer value can be retrieved from the resulting value using
336 \cfunction{PyLong_AsVoidPtr()}.
337 \versionadded{1.5.2}
Thomas Wouters49fd7fa2006-04-21 10:40:58 +0000338 \versionchanged[If the integer is larger than LONG_MAX,
339 a positive long integer is returned]{2.5}
340 \end{cfuncdesc}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000341
342\begin{cfuncdesc}{long}{PyLong_AsLong}{PyObject *pylong}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000343 Return a C \ctype{long} representation of the contents of
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000344 \var{pylong}. If \var{pylong} is greater than
345 \constant{LONG_MAX}\ttindex{LONG_MAX}, an \exception{OverflowError}
346 is raised.
347 \withsubitem{(built-in exception)}{\ttindex{OverflowError}}
348\end{cfuncdesc}
349
350\begin{cfuncdesc}{unsigned long}{PyLong_AsUnsignedLong}{PyObject *pylong}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000351 Return a C \ctype{unsigned long} representation of the contents of
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000352 \var{pylong}. If \var{pylong} is greater than
353 \constant{ULONG_MAX}\ttindex{ULONG_MAX}, an
354 \exception{OverflowError} is raised.
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +0000355 \withsubitem{(built-in exception)}{\ttindex{OverflowError}}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000356\end{cfuncdesc}
357
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000358\begin{cfuncdesc}{PY_LONG_LONG}{PyLong_AsLongLong}{PyObject *pylong}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000359 Return a C \ctype{long long} from a Python long integer. If
360 \var{pylong} cannot be represented as a \ctype{long long}, an
361 \exception{OverflowError} will be raised.
362 \versionadded{2.2}
363\end{cfuncdesc}
364
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000365\begin{cfuncdesc}{unsigned PY_LONG_LONG}{PyLong_AsUnsignedLongLong}{PyObject
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000366 *pylong}
367 Return a C \ctype{unsigned long long} from a Python long integer.
368 If \var{pylong} cannot be represented as an \ctype{unsigned long
369 long}, an \exception{OverflowError} will be raised if the value is
370 positive, or a \exception{TypeError} will be raised if the value is
371 negative.
372 \versionadded{2.2}
373\end{cfuncdesc}
374
Thomas Heller34d7f092003-04-23 19:51:05 +0000375\begin{cfuncdesc}{unsigned long}{PyLong_AsUnsignedLongMask}{PyObject *io}
376 Return a C \ctype{unsigned long} from a Python long integer, without
377 checking for overflow.
378 \versionadded{2.3}
379\end{cfuncdesc}
380
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +0000381\begin{cfuncdesc}{unsigned PY_LONG_LONG}{PyLong_AsUnsignedLongLongMask}{PyObject *io}
Thomas Heller34d7f092003-04-23 19:51:05 +0000382 Return a C \ctype{unsigned long long} from a Python long integer, without
383 checking for overflow.
384 \versionadded{2.3}
385\end{cfuncdesc}
386
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000387\begin{cfuncdesc}{double}{PyLong_AsDouble}{PyObject *pylong}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000388 Return a C \ctype{double} representation of the contents of
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000389 \var{pylong}. If \var{pylong} cannot be approximately represented
390 as a \ctype{double}, an \exception{OverflowError} exception is
391 raised and \code{-1.0} will be returned.
392\end{cfuncdesc}
393
394\begin{cfuncdesc}{void*}{PyLong_AsVoidPtr}{PyObject *pylong}
395 Convert a Python integer or long integer \var{pylong} to a C
396 \ctype{void} pointer. If \var{pylong} cannot be converted, an
397 \exception{OverflowError} will be raised. This is only assured to
398 produce a usable \ctype{void} pointer for values created with
399 \cfunction{PyLong_FromVoidPtr()}.
400 \versionadded{1.5.2}
Thomas Wouters49fd7fa2006-04-21 10:40:58 +0000401 \versionchanged[For values outside 0..LONG_MAX, both signed and
402 unsigned integers are acccepted]{2.5}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000403\end{cfuncdesc}
404
405
406\subsection{Floating Point Objects \label{floatObjects}}
407
408\obindex{floating point}
409\begin{ctypedesc}{PyFloatObject}
410 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} represents a Python floating point
411 object.
412\end{ctypedesc}
413
414\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyFloat_Type}
415 This instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} represents the Python floating
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +0000416 point type. This is the same object as \code{float} and
417 \code{types.FloatType}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000418 \withsubitem{(in modules types)}{\ttindex{FloatType}}
419\end{cvardesc}
420
421\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyFloat_Check}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000422 Return true if its argument is a \ctype{PyFloatObject} or a subtype
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000423 of \ctype{PyFloatObject}.
424 \versionchanged[Allowed subtypes to be accepted]{2.2}
425\end{cfuncdesc}
426
427\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyFloat_CheckExact}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000428 Return true if its argument is a \ctype{PyFloatObject}, but not a
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000429 subtype of \ctype{PyFloatObject}.
430 \versionadded{2.2}
431\end{cfuncdesc}
432
Georg Brandl428f0642007-03-18 18:35:15 +0000433\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFloat_FromString}{PyObject *str}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000434 Create a \ctype{PyFloatObject} object based on the string value in
Georg Brandl428f0642007-03-18 18:35:15 +0000435 \var{str}, or \NULL{} on failure.
Skip Montanaroae31e9b2003-02-03 03:56:36 +0000436\end{cfuncdesc}
437
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000438\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFloat_FromDouble}{double v}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000439 Create a \ctype{PyFloatObject} object from \var{v}, or \NULL{} on
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000440 failure.
441\end{cfuncdesc}
442
443\begin{cfuncdesc}{double}{PyFloat_AsDouble}{PyObject *pyfloat}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000444 Return a C \ctype{double} representation of the contents of
Guido van Rossumd8faa362007-04-27 19:54:29 +0000445 \var{pyfloat}. If \var{pyfloat} is not a Python floating point
446 object but has a \method{__float__} method, this method will first
447 be called to convert \var{pyfloat} into a float.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000448\end{cfuncdesc}
449
450\begin{cfuncdesc}{double}{PyFloat_AS_DOUBLE}{PyObject *pyfloat}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000451 Return a C \ctype{double} representation of the contents of
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000452 \var{pyfloat}, but without error checking.
453\end{cfuncdesc}
454
455
456\subsection{Complex Number Objects \label{complexObjects}}
457
458\obindex{complex number}
459Python's complex number objects are implemented as two distinct types
460when viewed from the C API: one is the Python object exposed to
461Python programs, and the other is a C structure which represents the
462actual complex number value. The API provides functions for working
463with both.
464
465\subsubsection{Complex Numbers as C Structures}
466
467Note that the functions which accept these structures as parameters
468and return them as results do so \emph{by value} rather than
469dereferencing them through pointers. This is consistent throughout
470the API.
471
472\begin{ctypedesc}{Py_complex}
473 The C structure which corresponds to the value portion of a Python
474 complex number object. Most of the functions for dealing with
475 complex number objects use structures of this type as input or
476 output values, as appropriate. It is defined as:
477
478\begin{verbatim}
479typedef struct {
480 double real;
481 double imag;
482} Py_complex;
483\end{verbatim}
484\end{ctypedesc}
485
486\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_complex}{_Py_c_sum}{Py_complex left, Py_complex right}
487 Return the sum of two complex numbers, using the C
488 \ctype{Py_complex} representation.
489\end{cfuncdesc}
490
491\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_complex}{_Py_c_diff}{Py_complex left, Py_complex right}
492 Return the difference between two complex numbers, using the C
493 \ctype{Py_complex} representation.
494\end{cfuncdesc}
495
496\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_complex}{_Py_c_neg}{Py_complex complex}
497 Return the negation of the complex number \var{complex}, using the C
498 \ctype{Py_complex} representation.
499\end{cfuncdesc}
500
501\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_complex}{_Py_c_prod}{Py_complex left, Py_complex right}
502 Return the product of two complex numbers, using the C
503 \ctype{Py_complex} representation.
504\end{cfuncdesc}
505
506\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_complex}{_Py_c_quot}{Py_complex dividend,
507 Py_complex divisor}
508 Return the quotient of two complex numbers, using the C
509 \ctype{Py_complex} representation.
510\end{cfuncdesc}
511
512\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_complex}{_Py_c_pow}{Py_complex num, Py_complex exp}
513 Return the exponentiation of \var{num} by \var{exp}, using the C
514 \ctype{Py_complex} representation.
515\end{cfuncdesc}
516
517
518\subsubsection{Complex Numbers as Python Objects}
519
520\begin{ctypedesc}{PyComplexObject}
521 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} represents a Python complex number
522 object.
523\end{ctypedesc}
524
525\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyComplex_Type}
526 This instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} represents the Python complex
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +0000527 number type. It is the same object as \code{complex} and
528 \code{types.ComplexType}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000529\end{cvardesc}
530
531\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyComplex_Check}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000532 Return true if its argument is a \ctype{PyComplexObject} or a
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000533 subtype of \ctype{PyComplexObject}.
534 \versionchanged[Allowed subtypes to be accepted]{2.2}
535\end{cfuncdesc}
536
537\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyComplex_CheckExact}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000538 Return true if its argument is a \ctype{PyComplexObject}, but not a
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000539 subtype of \ctype{PyComplexObject}.
540 \versionadded{2.2}
541\end{cfuncdesc}
542
543\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyComplex_FromCComplex}{Py_complex v}
544 Create a new Python complex number object from a C
545 \ctype{Py_complex} value.
546\end{cfuncdesc}
547
548\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyComplex_FromDoubles}{double real, double imag}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000549 Return a new \ctype{PyComplexObject} object from \var{real} and
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000550 \var{imag}.
551\end{cfuncdesc}
552
553\begin{cfuncdesc}{double}{PyComplex_RealAsDouble}{PyObject *op}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000554 Return the real part of \var{op} as a C \ctype{double}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000555\end{cfuncdesc}
556
557\begin{cfuncdesc}{double}{PyComplex_ImagAsDouble}{PyObject *op}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000558 Return the imaginary part of \var{op} as a C \ctype{double}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000559\end{cfuncdesc}
560
561\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_complex}{PyComplex_AsCComplex}{PyObject *op}
Guido van Rossumd8faa362007-04-27 19:54:29 +0000562 Return the \ctype{Py_complex} value of the complex number \var{op}.
563 \versionchanged[If \var{op} is not a Python complex number object
564 but has a \method{__complex__} method, this method
565 will first be called to convert \var{op} to a Python
566 complex number object]{2.6}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000567\end{cfuncdesc}
568
569
570
571\section{Sequence Objects \label{sequenceObjects}}
572
573\obindex{sequence}
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +0000574Generic operations on sequence objects were discussed in the previous
575chapter; this section deals with the specific kinds of sequence
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000576objects that are intrinsic to the Python language.
577
578
579\subsection{String Objects \label{stringObjects}}
580
581These functions raise \exception{TypeError} when expecting a string
582parameter and are called with a non-string parameter.
583
584\obindex{string}
585\begin{ctypedesc}{PyStringObject}
586 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} represents a Python string object.
587\end{ctypedesc}
588
589\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyString_Type}
590 This instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} represents the Python string
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +0000591 type; it is the same object as \code{str} and \code{types.StringType}
592 in the Python layer.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000593 \withsubitem{(in module types)}{\ttindex{StringType}}.
594\end{cvardesc}
595
596\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyString_Check}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000597 Return true if the object \var{o} is a string object or an instance
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000598 of a subtype of the string type.
599 \versionchanged[Allowed subtypes to be accepted]{2.2}
600\end{cfuncdesc}
601
602\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyString_CheckExact}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000603 Return true if the object \var{o} is a string object, but not an
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000604 instance of a subtype of the string type.
605 \versionadded{2.2}
606\end{cfuncdesc}
607
608\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyString_FromString}{const char *v}
Thomas Wouters89f507f2006-12-13 04:49:30 +0000609 Return a new string object with a copy of the string \var{v} as value
610 on success, and \NULL{} on failure. The parameter \var{v} must not be
611 \NULL{}; it will not be checked.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000612\end{cfuncdesc}
613
614\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyString_FromStringAndSize}{const char *v,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000615 Py_ssize_t len}
Thomas Wouters89f507f2006-12-13 04:49:30 +0000616 Return a new string object with a copy of the string \var{v} as value
617 and length \var{len} on success, and \NULL{} on failure. If \var{v} is
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +0000618 \NULL{}, the contents of the string are uninitialized.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000619\end{cfuncdesc}
620
621\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyString_FromFormat}{const char *format, ...}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000622 Take a C \cfunction{printf()}-style \var{format} string and a
623 variable number of arguments, calculate the size of the resulting
624 Python string and return a string with the values formatted into
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000625 it. The variable arguments must be C types and must correspond
626 exactly to the format characters in the \var{format} string. The
627 following format characters are allowed:
628
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +0000629 % This should be exactly the same as the table in PyErr_Format.
630 % One should just refer to the other.
631
632 % The descriptions for %zd and %zu are wrong, but the truth is complicated
633 % because not all compilers support the %z width modifier -- we fake it
634 % when necessary via interpolating PY_FORMAT_SIZE_T.
635
636 % %u, %lu, %zu should have "new in Python 2.5" blurbs.
637
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000638 \begin{tableiii}{l|l|l}{member}{Format Characters}{Type}{Comment}
639 \lineiii{\%\%}{\emph{n/a}}{The literal \% character.}
640 \lineiii{\%c}{int}{A single character, represented as an C int.}
641 \lineiii{\%d}{int}{Exactly equivalent to \code{printf("\%d")}.}
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +0000642 \lineiii{\%u}{unsigned int}{Exactly equivalent to \code{printf("\%u")}.}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000643 \lineiii{\%ld}{long}{Exactly equivalent to \code{printf("\%ld")}.}
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +0000644 \lineiii{\%lu}{unsigned long}{Exactly equivalent to \code{printf("\%lu")}.}
645 \lineiii{\%zd}{Py_ssize_t}{Exactly equivalent to \code{printf("\%zd")}.}
646 \lineiii{\%zu}{size_t}{Exactly equivalent to \code{printf("\%zu")}.}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000647 \lineiii{\%i}{int}{Exactly equivalent to \code{printf("\%i")}.}
648 \lineiii{\%x}{int}{Exactly equivalent to \code{printf("\%x")}.}
649 \lineiii{\%s}{char*}{A null-terminated C character array.}
650 \lineiii{\%p}{void*}{The hex representation of a C pointer.
651 Mostly equivalent to \code{printf("\%p")} except that it is
652 guaranteed to start with the literal \code{0x} regardless of
653 what the platform's \code{printf} yields.}
654 \end{tableiii}
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +0000655
656 An unrecognized format character causes all the rest of the format
657 string to be copied as-is to the result string, and any extra
658 arguments discarded.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000659\end{cfuncdesc}
660
661\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyString_FromFormatV}{const char *format,
662 va_list vargs}
663 Identical to \function{PyString_FromFormat()} except that it takes
664 exactly two arguments.
665\end{cfuncdesc}
666
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000667\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_ssize_t}{PyString_Size}{PyObject *string}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000668 Return the length of the string in string object \var{string}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000669\end{cfuncdesc}
670
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000671\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_ssize_t}{PyString_GET_SIZE}{PyObject *string}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000672 Macro form of \cfunction{PyString_Size()} but without error
673 checking.
674\end{cfuncdesc}
675
676\begin{cfuncdesc}{char*}{PyString_AsString}{PyObject *string}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000677 Return a NUL-terminated representation of the contents of
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000678 \var{string}. The pointer refers to the internal buffer of
679 \var{string}, not a copy. The data must not be modified in any way,
680 unless the string was just created using
681 \code{PyString_FromStringAndSize(NULL, \var{size})}.
Fred Drake4b247262002-10-22 20:20:20 +0000682 It must not be deallocated. If \var{string} is a Unicode object,
683 this function computes the default encoding of \var{string} and
684 operates on that. If \var{string} is not a string object at all,
685 \cfunction{PyString_AsString()} returns \NULL{} and raises
686 \exception{TypeError}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000687\end{cfuncdesc}
688
689\begin{cfuncdesc}{char*}{PyString_AS_STRING}{PyObject *string}
690 Macro form of \cfunction{PyString_AsString()} but without error
Fred Drake4b247262002-10-22 20:20:20 +0000691 checking. Only string objects are supported; no Unicode objects
692 should be passed.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000693\end{cfuncdesc}
694
695\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyString_AsStringAndSize}{PyObject *obj,
696 char **buffer,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000697 Py_ssize_t *length}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000698 Return a NUL-terminated representation of the contents of the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000699 object \var{obj} through the output variables \var{buffer} and
700 \var{length}.
701
702 The function accepts both string and Unicode objects as input. For
703 Unicode objects it returns the default encoded version of the
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +0000704 object. If \var{length} is \NULL{}, the resulting buffer may not
Fred Drake4b247262002-10-22 20:20:20 +0000705 contain NUL characters; if it does, the function returns \code{-1}
706 and a \exception{TypeError} is raised.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000707
708 The buffer refers to an internal string buffer of \var{obj}, not a
709 copy. The data must not be modified in any way, unless the string
710 was just created using \code{PyString_FromStringAndSize(NULL,
Fred Drake4b247262002-10-22 20:20:20 +0000711 \var{size})}. It must not be deallocated. If \var{string} is a
712 Unicode object, this function computes the default encoding of
713 \var{string} and operates on that. If \var{string} is not a string
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +0000714 object at all, \cfunction{PyString_AsStringAndSize()} returns
Georg Brandle53475d2005-09-28 12:53:12 +0000715 \code{-1} and raises \exception{TypeError}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000716\end{cfuncdesc}
717
718\begin{cfuncdesc}{void}{PyString_Concat}{PyObject **string,
719 PyObject *newpart}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000720 Create a new string object in \var{*string} containing the contents
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000721 of \var{newpart} appended to \var{string}; the caller will own the
722 new reference. The reference to the old value of \var{string} will
723 be stolen. If the new string cannot be created, the old reference
724 to \var{string} will still be discarded and the value of
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +0000725 \var{*string} will be set to \NULL{}; the appropriate exception will
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000726 be set.
727\end{cfuncdesc}
728
729\begin{cfuncdesc}{void}{PyString_ConcatAndDel}{PyObject **string,
730 PyObject *newpart}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000731 Create a new string object in \var{*string} containing the contents
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000732 of \var{newpart} appended to \var{string}. This version decrements
733 the reference count of \var{newpart}.
734\end{cfuncdesc}
735
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000736\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{_PyString_Resize}{PyObject **string, Py_ssize_t newsize}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000737 A way to resize a string object even though it is ``immutable''.
738 Only use this to build up a brand new string object; don't use this
Tim Peters5de98422002-04-27 18:44:32 +0000739 if the string may already be known in other parts of the code. It
740 is an error to call this function if the refcount on the input string
741 object is not one.
742 Pass the address of an existing string object as an lvalue (it may
743 be written into), and the new size desired. On success, \var{*string}
Fred Drake432425e2002-04-29 15:17:16 +0000744 holds the resized string object and \code{0} is returned; the address in
Tim Peters5de98422002-04-27 18:44:32 +0000745 \var{*string} may differ from its input value. If the
746 reallocation fails, the original string object at \var{*string} is
747 deallocated, \var{*string} is set to \NULL{}, a memory exception is set,
Fred Drake432425e2002-04-29 15:17:16 +0000748 and \code{-1} is returned.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000749\end{cfuncdesc}
750
751\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyString_Format}{PyObject *format,
752 PyObject *args}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000753 Return a new string object from \var{format} and \var{args}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000754 Analogous to \code{\var{format} \%\ \var{args}}. The \var{args}
755 argument must be a tuple.
756\end{cfuncdesc}
757
758\begin{cfuncdesc}{void}{PyString_InternInPlace}{PyObject **string}
759 Intern the argument \var{*string} in place. The argument must be
760 the address of a pointer variable pointing to a Python string
761 object. If there is an existing interned string that is the same as
762 \var{*string}, it sets \var{*string} to it (decrementing the
763 reference count of the old string object and incrementing the
764 reference count of the interned string object), otherwise it leaves
765 \var{*string} alone and interns it (incrementing its reference
766 count). (Clarification: even though there is a lot of talk about
767 reference counts, think of this function as reference-count-neutral;
768 you own the object after the call if and only if you owned it before
769 the call.)
770\end{cfuncdesc}
771
772\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyString_InternFromString}{const char *v}
773 A combination of \cfunction{PyString_FromString()} and
774 \cfunction{PyString_InternInPlace()}, returning either a new string
775 object that has been interned, or a new (``owned'') reference to an
776 earlier interned string object with the same value.
777\end{cfuncdesc}
778
779\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyString_Decode}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000780 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000781 const char *encoding,
782 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000783 Create an object by decoding \var{size} bytes of the encoded
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000784 buffer \var{s} using the codec registered for
785 \var{encoding}. \var{encoding} and \var{errors} have the same
786 meaning as the parameters of the same name in the
787 \function{unicode()} built-in function. The codec to be used is
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000788 looked up using the Python codec registry. Return \NULL{} if
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000789 an exception was raised by the codec.
790\end{cfuncdesc}
791
792\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyString_AsDecodedObject}{PyObject *str,
793 const char *encoding,
794 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000795 Decode a string object by passing it to the codec registered for
796 \var{encoding} and return the result as Python
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000797 object. \var{encoding} and \var{errors} have the same meaning as the
798 parameters of the same name in the string \method{encode()} method.
799 The codec to be used is looked up using the Python codec registry.
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000800 Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000801\end{cfuncdesc}
802
803\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyString_Encode}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000804 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000805 const char *encoding,
806 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000807 Encode the \ctype{char} buffer of the given size by passing it to
808 the codec registered for \var{encoding} and return a Python object.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000809 \var{encoding} and \var{errors} have the same meaning as the
810 parameters of the same name in the string \method{encode()} method.
811 The codec to be used is looked up using the Python codec
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000812 registry. Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000813 codec.
814\end{cfuncdesc}
815
816\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyString_AsEncodedObject}{PyObject *str,
817 const char *encoding,
818 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000819 Encode a string object using the codec registered for
820 \var{encoding} and return the result as Python object.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000821 \var{encoding} and \var{errors} have the same meaning as the
822 parameters of the same name in the string \method{encode()} method.
823 The codec to be used is looked up using the Python codec registry.
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000824 Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000825\end{cfuncdesc}
826
827
828\subsection{Unicode Objects \label{unicodeObjects}}
829\sectionauthor{Marc-Andre Lemburg}{mal@lemburg.com}
830
831%--- Unicode Type -------------------------------------------------------
832
833These are the basic Unicode object types used for the Unicode
834implementation in Python:
835
836\begin{ctypedesc}{Py_UNICODE}
Marc-André Lemburgdf4f6e92005-10-10 19:08:41 +0000837 This type represents the storage type which is used by Python
838 internally as basis for holding Unicode ordinals. Python's default
839 builds use a 16-bit type for \ctype{Py_UNICODE} and store Unicode
840 values internally as UCS2. It is also possible to build a UCS4
841 version of Python (most recent Linux distributions come with UCS4
842 builds of Python). These builds then use a 32-bit type for
843 \ctype{Py_UNICODE} and store Unicode data internally as UCS4. On
844 platforms where \ctype{wchar_t} is available and compatible with the
845 chosen Python Unicode build variant, \ctype{Py_UNICODE} is a typedef
846 alias for \ctype{wchar_t} to enhance native platform compatibility.
847 On all other platforms, \ctype{Py_UNICODE} is a typedef alias for
848 either \ctype{unsigned short} (UCS2) or \ctype{unsigned long}
849 (UCS4).
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000850\end{ctypedesc}
851
Marc-André Lemburgdf4f6e92005-10-10 19:08:41 +0000852Note that UCS2 and UCS4 Python builds are not binary compatible.
853Please keep this in mind when writing extensions or interfaces.
854
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000855\begin{ctypedesc}{PyUnicodeObject}
856 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} represents a Python Unicode object.
857\end{ctypedesc}
858
859\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyUnicode_Type}
860 This instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} represents the Python Unicode
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +0000861 type. It is exposed to Python code as \code{unicode} and
862 \code{types.UnicodeType}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000863\end{cvardesc}
864
865The following APIs are really C macros and can be used to do fast
866checks and to access internal read-only data of Unicode objects:
867
868\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyUnicode_Check}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000869 Return true if the object \var{o} is a Unicode object or an
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000870 instance of a Unicode subtype.
871 \versionchanged[Allowed subtypes to be accepted]{2.2}
872\end{cfuncdesc}
873
874\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyUnicode_CheckExact}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000875 Return true if the object \var{o} is a Unicode object, but not an
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000876 instance of a subtype.
877 \versionadded{2.2}
878\end{cfuncdesc}
879
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000880\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_ssize_t}{PyUnicode_GET_SIZE}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000881 Return the size of the object. \var{o} has to be a
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000882 \ctype{PyUnicodeObject} (not checked).
883\end{cfuncdesc}
884
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000885\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_ssize_t}{PyUnicode_GET_DATA_SIZE}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000886 Return the size of the object's internal buffer in bytes. \var{o}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000887 has to be a \ctype{PyUnicodeObject} (not checked).
888\end{cfuncdesc}
889
890\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_UNICODE*}{PyUnicode_AS_UNICODE}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000891 Return a pointer to the internal \ctype{Py_UNICODE} buffer of the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000892 object. \var{o} has to be a \ctype{PyUnicodeObject} (not checked).
893\end{cfuncdesc}
894
895\begin{cfuncdesc}{const char*}{PyUnicode_AS_DATA}{PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000896 Return a pointer to the internal buffer of the object.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000897 \var{o} has to be a \ctype{PyUnicodeObject} (not checked).
898\end{cfuncdesc}
899
900% --- Unicode character properties ---------------------------------------
901
902Unicode provides many different character properties. The most often
903needed ones are available through these macros which are mapped to C
904functions depending on the Python configuration.
905
906\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{Py_UNICODE_ISSPACE}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000907 Return 1 or 0 depending on whether \var{ch} is a whitespace
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000908 character.
909\end{cfuncdesc}
910
911\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{Py_UNICODE_ISLOWER}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000912 Return 1 or 0 depending on whether \var{ch} is a lowercase character.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000913\end{cfuncdesc}
914
915\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{Py_UNICODE_ISUPPER}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000916 Return 1 or 0 depending on whether \var{ch} is an uppercase
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000917 character.
918\end{cfuncdesc}
919
920\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{Py_UNICODE_ISTITLE}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000921 Return 1 or 0 depending on whether \var{ch} is a titlecase character.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000922\end{cfuncdesc}
923
924\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{Py_UNICODE_ISLINEBREAK}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000925 Return 1 or 0 depending on whether \var{ch} is a linebreak character.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000926\end{cfuncdesc}
927
928\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{Py_UNICODE_ISDECIMAL}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000929 Return 1 or 0 depending on whether \var{ch} is a decimal character.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000930\end{cfuncdesc}
931
932\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{Py_UNICODE_ISDIGIT}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000933 Return 1 or 0 depending on whether \var{ch} is a digit character.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000934\end{cfuncdesc}
935
936\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{Py_UNICODE_ISNUMERIC}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000937 Return 1 or 0 depending on whether \var{ch} is a numeric character.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000938\end{cfuncdesc}
939
940\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{Py_UNICODE_ISALPHA}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000941 Return 1 or 0 depending on whether \var{ch} is an alphabetic
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000942 character.
943\end{cfuncdesc}
944
945\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{Py_UNICODE_ISALNUM}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000946 Return 1 or 0 depending on whether \var{ch} is an alphanumeric
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000947 character.
948\end{cfuncdesc}
949
950These APIs can be used for fast direct character conversions:
951
952\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_UNICODE}{Py_UNICODE_TOLOWER}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000953 Return the character \var{ch} converted to lower case.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000954\end{cfuncdesc}
955
956\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_UNICODE}{Py_UNICODE_TOUPPER}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000957 Return the character \var{ch} converted to upper case.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000958\end{cfuncdesc}
959
960\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_UNICODE}{Py_UNICODE_TOTITLE}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000961 Return the character \var{ch} converted to title case.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000962\end{cfuncdesc}
963
964\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{Py_UNICODE_TODECIMAL}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000965 Return the character \var{ch} converted to a decimal positive
966 integer. Return \code{-1} if this is not possible. This macro
967 does not raise exceptions.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000968\end{cfuncdesc}
969
970\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{Py_UNICODE_TODIGIT}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000971 Return the character \var{ch} converted to a single digit integer.
972 Return \code{-1} if this is not possible. This macro does not raise
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000973 exceptions.
974\end{cfuncdesc}
975
976\begin{cfuncdesc}{double}{Py_UNICODE_TONUMERIC}{Py_UNICODE ch}
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +0000977 Return the character \var{ch} converted to a double.
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +0000978 Return \code{-1.0} if this is not possible. This macro does not raise
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000979 exceptions.
980\end{cfuncdesc}
981
982% --- Plain Py_UNICODE ---------------------------------------------------
983
984To create Unicode objects and access their basic sequence properties,
985use these APIs:
986
987\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_FromUnicode}{const Py_UNICODE *u,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +0000988 Py_ssize_t size}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000989 Create a Unicode Object from the Py_UNICODE buffer \var{u} of the
990 given size. \var{u} may be \NULL{} which causes the contents to be
991 undefined. It is the user's responsibility to fill in the needed
992 data. The buffer is copied into the new object. If the buffer is
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +0000993 not \NULL{}, the return value might be a shared object. Therefore,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000994 modification of the resulting Unicode object is only allowed when
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +0000995 \var{u} is \NULL{}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +0000996\end{cfuncdesc}
997
Walter Dörwaldacaa5a12007-05-05 12:00:46 +0000998\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_FromString}{const char *u}
Walter Dörwald1d0476b2007-05-24 19:10:53 +0000999 Create a Unicode Object from the char buffer \var{u}.
Walter Dörwaldacaa5a12007-05-05 12:00:46 +00001000 \var{u} must be 0-terminated, the bytes will be interpreted as
1001 being latin-1 encoded. \var{u} may also be \NULL{} which causes the
1002 contents to be undefined. It is the user's responsibility to fill
1003 in the needed data. The buffer is copied into the new object.
1004 If the buffer is not \NULL{}, the return value might be a shared object.
1005 Therefore, modification of the resulting Unicode object is only allowed
1006 when \var{u} is \NULL{}.
1007\end{cfuncdesc}
1008
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001009\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_UNICODE*}{PyUnicode_AsUnicode}{PyObject *unicode}
1010 Return a read-only pointer to the Unicode object's internal
1011 \ctype{Py_UNICODE} buffer, \NULL{} if \var{unicode} is not a Unicode
1012 object.
1013\end{cfuncdesc}
1014
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001015\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_ssize_t}{PyUnicode_GetSize}{PyObject *unicode}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001016 Return the length of the Unicode object.
1017\end{cfuncdesc}
1018
1019\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject}{PyObject *obj,
1020 const char *encoding,
1021 const char *errors}
1022 Coerce an encoded object \var{obj} to an Unicode object and return a
1023 reference with incremented refcount.
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +00001024
1025 String and other char buffer compatible objects are decoded
1026 according to the given encoding and using the error handling
1027 defined by errors. Both can be \NULL{} to have the interface
1028 use the default values (see the next section for details).
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001029
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +00001030 All other objects, including Unicode objects, cause a
1031 \exception{TypeError} to be set.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001032
1033 The API returns \NULL{} if there was an error. The caller is
1034 responsible for decref'ing the returned objects.
1035\end{cfuncdesc}
1036
1037\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_FromObject}{PyObject *obj}
1038 Shortcut for \code{PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject(obj, NULL, "strict")}
1039 which is used throughout the interpreter whenever coercion to
1040 Unicode is needed.
1041\end{cfuncdesc}
1042
1043% --- wchar_t support for platforms which support it ---------------------
1044
1045If the platform supports \ctype{wchar_t} and provides a header file
1046wchar.h, Python can interface directly to this type using the
1047following functions. Support is optimized if Python's own
1048\ctype{Py_UNICODE} type is identical to the system's \ctype{wchar_t}.
1049
1050\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_FromWideChar}{const wchar_t *w,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001051 Py_ssize_t size}
Thomas Heller541703b2002-04-29 17:28:43 +00001052 Create a Unicode object from the \ctype{wchar_t} buffer \var{w} of
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001053 the given size. Return \NULL{} on failure.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001054\end{cfuncdesc}
1055
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001056\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_ssize_t}{PyUnicode_AsWideChar}{PyUnicodeObject *unicode,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001057 wchar_t *w,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001058 Py_ssize_t size}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001059 Copy the Unicode object contents into the \ctype{wchar_t} buffer
Marc-André Lemburga9cadcd2004-11-22 13:02:31 +00001060 \var{w}. At most \var{size} \ctype{wchar_t} characters are copied
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001061 (excluding a possibly trailing 0-termination character). Return
Marc-André Lemburga9cadcd2004-11-22 13:02:31 +00001062 the number of \ctype{wchar_t} characters copied or -1 in case of an
1063 error. Note that the resulting \ctype{wchar_t} string may or may
1064 not be 0-terminated. It is the responsibility of the caller to make
1065 sure that the \ctype{wchar_t} string is 0-terminated in case this is
1066 required by the application.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001067\end{cfuncdesc}
1068
1069
1070\subsubsection{Built-in Codecs \label{builtinCodecs}}
1071
1072Python provides a set of builtin codecs which are written in C
1073for speed. All of these codecs are directly usable via the
1074following functions.
1075
1076Many of the following APIs take two arguments encoding and
1077errors. These parameters encoding and errors have the same semantics
1078as the ones of the builtin unicode() Unicode object constructor.
1079
1080Setting encoding to \NULL{} causes the default encoding to be used
1081which is \ASCII. The file system calls should use
1082\cdata{Py_FileSystemDefaultEncoding} as the encoding for file
1083names. This variable should be treated as read-only: On some systems,
1084it will be a pointer to a static string, on others, it will change at
Raymond Hettingercb2da432003-10-12 18:24:34 +00001085run-time (such as when the application invokes setlocale).
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001086
1087Error handling is set by errors which may also be set to \NULL{}
1088meaning to use the default handling defined for the codec. Default
1089error handling for all builtin codecs is ``strict''
1090(\exception{ValueError} is raised).
1091
1092The codecs all use a similar interface. Only deviation from the
1093following generic ones are documented for simplicity.
1094
1095% --- Generic Codecs -----------------------------------------------------
1096
1097These are the generic codec APIs:
1098
1099\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_Decode}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001100 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001101 const char *encoding,
1102 const char *errors}
1103 Create a Unicode object by decoding \var{size} bytes of the encoded
1104 string \var{s}. \var{encoding} and \var{errors} have the same
1105 meaning as the parameters of the same name in the
1106 \function{unicode()} builtin function. The codec to be used is
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001107 looked up using the Python codec registry. Return \NULL{} if an
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001108 exception was raised by the codec.
1109\end{cfuncdesc}
1110
1111\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_Encode}{const Py_UNICODE *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001112 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001113 const char *encoding,
1114 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001115 Encode the \ctype{Py_UNICODE} buffer of the given size and return
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001116 a Python string object. \var{encoding} and \var{errors} have the
1117 same meaning as the parameters of the same name in the Unicode
1118 \method{encode()} method. The codec to be used is looked up using
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001119 the Python codec registry. Return \NULL{} if an exception was
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001120 raised by the codec.
1121\end{cfuncdesc}
1122
1123\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_AsEncodedString}{PyObject *unicode,
1124 const char *encoding,
1125 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001126 Encode a Unicode object and return the result as Python string
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001127 object. \var{encoding} and \var{errors} have the same meaning as the
1128 parameters of the same name in the Unicode \method{encode()} method.
1129 The codec to be used is looked up using the Python codec registry.
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001130 Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001131\end{cfuncdesc}
1132
1133% --- UTF-8 Codecs -------------------------------------------------------
1134
1135These are the UTF-8 codec APIs:
1136
1137\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_DecodeUTF8}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001138 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001139 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001140 Create a Unicode object by decoding \var{size} bytes of the UTF-8
1141 encoded string \var{s}. Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001142 by the codec.
1143\end{cfuncdesc}
1144
Walter Dörwald69652032004-09-07 20:24:22 +00001145\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_DecodeUTF8Stateful}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001146 Py_ssize_t size,
Walter Dörwald69652032004-09-07 20:24:22 +00001147 const char *errors,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001148 Py_ssize_t *consumed}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001149 If \var{consumed} is \NULL{}, behave like \cfunction{PyUnicode_DecodeUTF8()}.
Walter Dörwald69652032004-09-07 20:24:22 +00001150 If \var{consumed} is not \NULL{}, trailing incomplete UTF-8 byte sequences
1151 will not be treated as an error. Those bytes will not be decoded and the
1152 number of bytes that have been decoded will be stored in \var{consumed}.
1153 \versionadded{2.4}
1154\end{cfuncdesc}
1155
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001156\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_EncodeUTF8}{const Py_UNICODE *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001157 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001158 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001159 Encode the \ctype{Py_UNICODE} buffer of the given size using UTF-8
1160 and return a Python string object. Return \NULL{} if an exception
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001161 was raised by the codec.
1162\end{cfuncdesc}
1163
1164\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_AsUTF8String}{PyObject *unicode}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001165 Encode a Unicode objects using UTF-8 and return the result as
1166 Python string object. Error handling is ``strict''. Return
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001167 \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
1168\end{cfuncdesc}
1169
1170% --- UTF-16 Codecs ------------------------------------------------------ */
1171
1172These are the UTF-16 codec APIs:
1173
1174\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_DecodeUTF16}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001175 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001176 const char *errors,
1177 int *byteorder}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001178 Decode \var{length} bytes from a UTF-16 encoded buffer string and
1179 return the corresponding Unicode object. \var{errors} (if
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00001180 non-\NULL{}) defines the error handling. It defaults to ``strict''.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001181
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00001182 If \var{byteorder} is non-\NULL{}, the decoder starts decoding using
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001183 the given byte order:
1184
1185\begin{verbatim}
1186 *byteorder == -1: little endian
1187 *byteorder == 0: native order
1188 *byteorder == 1: big endian
1189\end{verbatim}
1190
Guido van Rossum360e4b82007-05-14 22:51:27 +00001191 and then switches if the first two bytes of the input data are a byte order
1192 mark (BOM) and the specified byte order is native order. This BOM is not
1193 copied into the resulting Unicode string. After completion, \var{*byteorder}
1194 is set to the current byte order at the.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001195
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00001196 If \var{byteorder} is \NULL{}, the codec starts in native order mode.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001197
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001198 Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001199\end{cfuncdesc}
1200
Walter Dörwald69652032004-09-07 20:24:22 +00001201\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_DecodeUTF16Stateful}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001202 Py_ssize_t size,
Walter Dörwald69652032004-09-07 20:24:22 +00001203 const char *errors,
1204 int *byteorder,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001205 Py_ssize_t *consumed}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001206 If \var{consumed} is \NULL{}, behave like
Walter Dörwald69652032004-09-07 20:24:22 +00001207 \cfunction{PyUnicode_DecodeUTF16()}. If \var{consumed} is not \NULL{},
1208 \cfunction{PyUnicode_DecodeUTF16Stateful()} will not treat trailing incomplete
Raymond Hettinger0c230b92005-08-17 10:05:22 +00001209 UTF-16 byte sequences (such as an odd number of bytes or a split surrogate pair)
Walter Dörwald69652032004-09-07 20:24:22 +00001210 as an error. Those bytes will not be decoded and the number of bytes that
1211 have been decoded will be stored in \var{consumed}.
1212 \versionadded{2.4}
1213\end{cfuncdesc}
1214
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001215\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_EncodeUTF16}{const Py_UNICODE *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001216 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001217 const char *errors,
1218 int byteorder}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001219 Return a Python string object holding the UTF-16 encoded value of
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001220 the Unicode data in \var{s}. If \var{byteorder} is not \code{0},
1221 output is written according to the following byte order:
1222
1223\begin{verbatim}
1224 byteorder == -1: little endian
1225 byteorder == 0: native byte order (writes a BOM mark)
1226 byteorder == 1: big endian
1227\end{verbatim}
1228
1229 If byteorder is \code{0}, the output string will always start with
1230 the Unicode BOM mark (U+FEFF). In the other two modes, no BOM mark
1231 is prepended.
1232
Martin v. Löwis9bc4f2d2004-06-03 09:55:28 +00001233 If \var{Py_UNICODE_WIDE} is defined, a single \ctype{Py_UNICODE}
1234 value may get represented as a surrogate pair. If it is not
1235 defined, each \ctype{Py_UNICODE} values is interpreted as an
1236 UCS-2 character.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001237
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001238 Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001239\end{cfuncdesc}
1240
1241\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_AsUTF16String}{PyObject *unicode}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001242 Return a Python string using the UTF-16 encoding in native byte
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001243 order. The string always starts with a BOM mark. Error handling is
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001244 ``strict''. Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001245 codec.
1246\end{cfuncdesc}
1247
1248% --- Unicode-Escape Codecs ----------------------------------------------
1249
Martin v. Löwis95cf84a2003-10-19 07:32:24 +00001250These are the ``Unicode Escape'' codec APIs:
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001251
1252\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_DecodeUnicodeEscape}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001253 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001254 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001255 Create a Unicode object by decoding \var{size} bytes of the
1256 Unicode-Escape encoded string \var{s}. Return \NULL{} if an
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001257 exception was raised by the codec.
1258\end{cfuncdesc}
1259
1260\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_EncodeUnicodeEscape}{const Py_UNICODE *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001261 Py_ssize_t size}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001262 Encode the \ctype{Py_UNICODE} buffer of the given size using
1263 Unicode-Escape and return a Python string object. Return \NULL{}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001264 if an exception was raised by the codec.
1265\end{cfuncdesc}
1266
1267\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_AsUnicodeEscapeString}{PyObject *unicode}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001268 Encode a Unicode objects using Unicode-Escape and return the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001269 result as Python string object. Error handling is ``strict''.
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001270 Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001271\end{cfuncdesc}
1272
1273% --- Raw-Unicode-Escape Codecs ------------------------------------------
1274
Martin v. Löwis95cf84a2003-10-19 07:32:24 +00001275These are the ``Raw Unicode Escape'' codec APIs:
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001276
1277\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_DecodeRawUnicodeEscape}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001278 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001279 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001280 Create a Unicode object by decoding \var{size} bytes of the
1281 Raw-Unicode-Escape encoded string \var{s}. Return \NULL{} if an
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001282 exception was raised by the codec.
1283\end{cfuncdesc}
1284
1285\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_EncodeRawUnicodeEscape}{const Py_UNICODE *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001286 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001287 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001288 Encode the \ctype{Py_UNICODE} buffer of the given size using
1289 Raw-Unicode-Escape and return a Python string object. Return
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001290 \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
1291\end{cfuncdesc}
1292
1293\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_AsRawUnicodeEscapeString}{PyObject *unicode}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001294 Encode a Unicode objects using Raw-Unicode-Escape and return the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001295 result as Python string object. Error handling is ``strict''.
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001296 Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001297\end{cfuncdesc}
1298
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +00001299% --- Latin-1 Codecs -----------------------------------------------------
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001300
1301These are the Latin-1 codec APIs:
1302Latin-1 corresponds to the first 256 Unicode ordinals and only these
1303are accepted by the codecs during encoding.
1304
1305\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_DecodeLatin1}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001306 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001307 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001308 Create a Unicode object by decoding \var{size} bytes of the Latin-1
1309 encoded string \var{s}. Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001310 by the codec.
1311\end{cfuncdesc}
1312
1313\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_EncodeLatin1}{const Py_UNICODE *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001314 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001315 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001316 Encode the \ctype{Py_UNICODE} buffer of the given size using
1317 Latin-1 and return a Python string object. Return \NULL{} if an
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001318 exception was raised by the codec.
1319\end{cfuncdesc}
1320
1321\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_AsLatin1String}{PyObject *unicode}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001322 Encode a Unicode objects using Latin-1 and return the result as
1323 Python string object. Error handling is ``strict''. Return
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001324 \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
1325\end{cfuncdesc}
1326
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +00001327% --- ASCII Codecs -------------------------------------------------------
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001328
1329These are the \ASCII{} codec APIs. Only 7-bit \ASCII{} data is
1330accepted. All other codes generate errors.
1331
1332\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_DecodeASCII}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001333 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001334 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001335 Create a Unicode object by decoding \var{size} bytes of the
1336 \ASCII{} encoded string \var{s}. Return \NULL{} if an exception
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001337 was raised by the codec.
1338\end{cfuncdesc}
1339
1340\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_EncodeASCII}{const Py_UNICODE *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001341 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001342 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001343 Encode the \ctype{Py_UNICODE} buffer of the given size using
1344 \ASCII{} and return a Python string object. Return \NULL{} if an
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001345 exception was raised by the codec.
1346\end{cfuncdesc}
1347
1348\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_AsASCIIString}{PyObject *unicode}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001349 Encode a Unicode objects using \ASCII{} and return the result as
1350 Python string object. Error handling is ``strict''. Return
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001351 \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
1352\end{cfuncdesc}
1353
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +00001354% --- Character Map Codecs -----------------------------------------------
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001355
1356These are the mapping codec APIs:
1357
1358This codec is special in that it can be used to implement many
1359different codecs (and this is in fact what was done to obtain most of
1360the standard codecs included in the \module{encodings} package). The
1361codec uses mapping to encode and decode characters.
1362
1363Decoding mappings must map single string characters to single Unicode
1364characters, integers (which are then interpreted as Unicode ordinals)
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +00001365or None (meaning "undefined mapping" and causing an error).
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001366
1367Encoding mappings must map single Unicode characters to single string
1368characters, integers (which are then interpreted as Latin-1 ordinals)
1369or None (meaning "undefined mapping" and causing an error).
1370
1371The mapping objects provided must only support the __getitem__ mapping
1372interface.
1373
1374If a character lookup fails with a LookupError, the character is
1375copied as-is meaning that its ordinal value will be interpreted as
1376Unicode or Latin-1 ordinal resp. Because of this, mappings only need
1377to contain those mappings which map characters to different code
1378points.
1379
1380\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_DecodeCharmap}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001381 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001382 PyObject *mapping,
1383 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001384 Create a Unicode object by decoding \var{size} bytes of the encoded
1385 string \var{s} using the given \var{mapping} object. Return
Walter Dörwaldd1c1e102005-10-06 20:29:57 +00001386 \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec. If \var{mapping} is \NULL{}
1387 latin-1 decoding will be done. Else it can be a dictionary mapping byte or a
1388 unicode string, which is treated as a lookup table. Byte values greater
1389 that the length of the string and U+FFFE "characters" are treated as
1390 "undefined mapping".
1391 \versionchanged[Allowed unicode string as mapping argument]{2.4}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001392\end{cfuncdesc}
1393
1394\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_EncodeCharmap}{const Py_UNICODE *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001395 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001396 PyObject *mapping,
1397 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001398 Encode the \ctype{Py_UNICODE} buffer of the given size using the
1399 given \var{mapping} object and return a Python string object.
1400 Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001401\end{cfuncdesc}
1402
1403\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_AsCharmapString}{PyObject *unicode,
1404 PyObject *mapping}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001405 Encode a Unicode objects using the given \var{mapping} object and
1406 return the result as Python string object. Error handling is
1407 ``strict''. Return \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001408 codec.
1409\end{cfuncdesc}
1410
1411The following codec API is special in that maps Unicode to Unicode.
1412
1413\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_TranslateCharmap}{const Py_UNICODE *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001414 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001415 PyObject *table,
1416 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001417 Translate a \ctype{Py_UNICODE} buffer of the given length by
1418 applying a character mapping \var{table} to it and return the
1419 resulting Unicode object. Return \NULL{} when an exception was
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001420 raised by the codec.
1421
1422 The \var{mapping} table must map Unicode ordinal integers to Unicode
1423 ordinal integers or None (causing deletion of the character).
1424
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +00001425 Mapping tables need only provide the \method{__getitem__()}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001426 interface; dictionaries and sequences work well. Unmapped character
1427 ordinals (ones which cause a \exception{LookupError}) are left
1428 untouched and are copied as-is.
1429\end{cfuncdesc}
1430
1431% --- MBCS codecs for Windows --------------------------------------------
1432
1433These are the MBCS codec APIs. They are currently only available on
1434Windows and use the Win32 MBCS converters to implement the
1435conversions. Note that MBCS (or DBCS) is a class of encodings, not
1436just one. The target encoding is defined by the user settings on the
1437machine running the codec.
1438
1439\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_DecodeMBCS}{const char *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001440 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001441 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001442 Create a Unicode object by decoding \var{size} bytes of the MBCS
1443 encoded string \var{s}. Return \NULL{} if an exception was
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001444 raised by the codec.
1445\end{cfuncdesc}
1446
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +00001447\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_DecodeMBCSStateful}{const char *s,
1448 int size,
1449 const char *errors,
1450 int *consumed}
1451 If \var{consumed} is \NULL{}, behave like
1452 \cfunction{PyUnicode_DecodeMBCS()}. If \var{consumed} is not \NULL{},
1453 \cfunction{PyUnicode_DecodeMBCSStateful()} will not decode trailing lead
1454 byte and the number of bytes that have been decoded will be stored in
1455 \var{consumed}.
1456 \versionadded{2.5}
1457\end{cfuncdesc}
1458
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001459\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_EncodeMBCS}{const Py_UNICODE *s,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001460 Py_ssize_t size,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001461 const char *errors}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001462 Encode the \ctype{Py_UNICODE} buffer of the given size using MBCS
1463 and return a Python string object. Return \NULL{} if an exception
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001464 was raised by the codec.
1465\end{cfuncdesc}
1466
1467\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_AsMBCSString}{PyObject *unicode}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001468 Encode a Unicode objects using MBCS and return the result as
1469 Python string object. Error handling is ``strict''. Return
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001470 \NULL{} if an exception was raised by the codec.
1471\end{cfuncdesc}
1472
1473% --- Methods & Slots ----------------------------------------------------
1474
1475\subsubsection{Methods and Slot Functions \label{unicodeMethodsAndSlots}}
1476
1477The following APIs are capable of handling Unicode objects and strings
1478on input (we refer to them as strings in the descriptions) and return
Martin v. Löwis95cf84a2003-10-19 07:32:24 +00001479Unicode objects or integers as appropriate.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001480
1481They all return \NULL{} or \code{-1} if an exception occurs.
1482
1483\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_Concat}{PyObject *left,
1484 PyObject *right}
1485 Concat two strings giving a new Unicode string.
1486\end{cfuncdesc}
1487
1488\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_Split}{PyObject *s,
1489 PyObject *sep,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001490 Py_ssize_t maxsplit}
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00001491 Split a string giving a list of Unicode strings. If sep is \NULL{},
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001492 splitting will be done at all whitespace substrings. Otherwise,
1493 splits occur at the given separator. At most \var{maxsplit} splits
1494 will be done. If negative, no limit is set. Separators are not
1495 included in the resulting list.
1496\end{cfuncdesc}
1497
1498\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_Splitlines}{PyObject *s,
Martin v. Löwis24b88812003-03-30 16:40:42 +00001499 int keepend}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001500 Split a Unicode string at line breaks, returning a list of Unicode
Martin v. Löwis24b88812003-03-30 16:40:42 +00001501 strings. CRLF is considered to be one line break. If \var{keepend}
1502 is 0, the Line break characters are not included in the resulting
1503 strings.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001504\end{cfuncdesc}
1505
1506\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_Translate}{PyObject *str,
1507 PyObject *table,
1508 const char *errors}
1509 Translate a string by applying a character mapping table to it and
1510 return the resulting Unicode object.
1511
1512 The mapping table must map Unicode ordinal integers to Unicode
1513 ordinal integers or None (causing deletion of the character).
1514
1515 Mapping tables need only provide the \method{__getitem__()}
1516 interface; dictionaries and sequences work well. Unmapped character
1517 ordinals (ones which cause a \exception{LookupError}) are left
1518 untouched and are copied as-is.
1519
1520 \var{errors} has the usual meaning for codecs. It may be \NULL{}
1521 which indicates to use the default error handling.
1522\end{cfuncdesc}
1523
1524\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_Join}{PyObject *separator,
1525 PyObject *seq}
1526 Join a sequence of strings using the given separator and return the
1527 resulting Unicode string.
1528\end{cfuncdesc}
1529
Raymond Hettinger8ef9b3e2004-12-10 17:12:32 +00001530\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyUnicode_Tailmatch}{PyObject *str,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001531 PyObject *substr,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001532 Py_ssize_t start,
1533 Py_ssize_t end,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001534 int direction}
1535 Return 1 if \var{substr} matches \var{str}[\var{start}:\var{end}] at
1536 the given tail end (\var{direction} == -1 means to do a prefix
1537 match, \var{direction} == 1 a suffix match), 0 otherwise.
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +00001538 Return \code{-1} if an error occurred.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001539\end{cfuncdesc}
1540
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001541\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_ssize_t}{PyUnicode_Find}{PyObject *str,
Fred Drake1d1e1db2002-06-20 22:07:04 +00001542 PyObject *substr,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001543 Py_ssize_t start,
1544 Py_ssize_t end,
Fred Drake1d1e1db2002-06-20 22:07:04 +00001545 int direction}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001546 Return the first position of \var{substr} in
1547 \var{str}[\var{start}:\var{end}] using the given \var{direction}
1548 (\var{direction} == 1 means to do a forward search,
Fred Drake1d1e1db2002-06-20 22:07:04 +00001549 \var{direction} == -1 a backward search). The return value is the
1550 index of the first match; a value of \code{-1} indicates that no
1551 match was found, and \code{-2} indicates that an error occurred and
1552 an exception has been set.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001553\end{cfuncdesc}
1554
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001555\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_ssize_t}{PyUnicode_Count}{PyObject *str,
Fred Drake1d1e1db2002-06-20 22:07:04 +00001556 PyObject *substr,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001557 Py_ssize_t start,
1558 Py_ssize_t end}
Fred Drake1d1e1db2002-06-20 22:07:04 +00001559 Return the number of non-overlapping occurrences of \var{substr} in
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001560 \code{\var{str}[\var{start}:\var{end}]}. Return \code{-1} if an
Fred Drake1d1e1db2002-06-20 22:07:04 +00001561 error occurred.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001562\end{cfuncdesc}
1563
1564\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_Replace}{PyObject *str,
1565 PyObject *substr,
1566 PyObject *replstr,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001567 Py_ssize_t maxcount}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001568 Replace at most \var{maxcount} occurrences of \var{substr} in
1569 \var{str} with \var{replstr} and return the resulting Unicode object.
1570 \var{maxcount} == -1 means replace all occurrences.
1571\end{cfuncdesc}
1572
1573\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyUnicode_Compare}{PyObject *left, PyObject *right}
1574 Compare two strings and return -1, 0, 1 for less than, equal, and
1575 greater than, respectively.
1576\end{cfuncdesc}
1577
Thomas Wouters00ee7ba2006-08-21 19:07:27 +00001578\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyUnicode_RichCompare}{PyObject *left,
1579 PyObject *right,
1580 int op}
1581
1582 Rich compare two unicode strings and return one of the following:
1583 \begin{itemize}
1584 \item \code{NULL} in case an exception was raised
1585 \item \constant{Py_True} or \constant{Py_False} for successful comparisons
1586 \item \constant{Py_NotImplemented} in case the type combination is unknown
1587 \end{itemize}
1588
1589 Note that \constant{Py_EQ} and \constant{Py_NE} comparisons can cause a
1590 \exception{UnicodeWarning} in case the conversion of the arguments to
1591 Unicode fails with a \exception{UnicodeDecodeError}.
1592
1593 Possible values for \var{op} are
1594 \constant{Py_GT}, \constant{Py_GE}, \constant{Py_EQ},
1595 \constant{Py_NE}, \constant{Py_LT}, and \constant{Py_LE}.
1596\end{cfuncdesc}
1597
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001598\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_Format}{PyObject *format,
1599 PyObject *args}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001600 Return a new string object from \var{format} and \var{args}; this
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001601 is analogous to \code{\var{format} \%\ \var{args}}. The
1602 \var{args} argument must be a tuple.
1603\end{cfuncdesc}
1604
1605\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyUnicode_Contains}{PyObject *container,
1606 PyObject *element}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001607 Check whether \var{element} is contained in \var{container} and
1608 return true or false accordingly.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001609
1610 \var{element} has to coerce to a one element Unicode
1611 string. \code{-1} is returned if there was an error.
1612\end{cfuncdesc}
1613
Walter Dörwalde65c86c2007-05-25 14:14:31 +00001614\begin{cfuncdesc}{void}{PyUnicode_InternInPlace}{PyObject **string}
1615 Intern the argument \var{*string} in place. The argument must be
1616 the address of a pointer variable pointing to a Python unicode string
1617 object. If there is an existing interned string that is the same as
1618 \var{*string}, it sets \var{*string} to it (decrementing the
1619 reference count of the old string object and incrementing the
1620 reference count of the interned string object), otherwise it leaves
1621 \var{*string} alone and interns it (incrementing its reference
1622 count). (Clarification: even though there is a lot of talk about
1623 reference counts, think of this function as reference-count-neutral;
1624 you own the object after the call if and only if you owned it before
1625 the call.)
1626\end{cfuncdesc}
1627
1628\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyUnicode_InternFromString}{const char *v}
1629 A combination of \cfunction{PyUnicode_FromString()} and
1630 \cfunction{PyUnicode_InternInPlace()}, returning either a new unicode
1631 string object that has been interned, or a new (``owned'') reference to
1632 an earlier interned string object with the same value.
1633\end{cfuncdesc}
1634
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001635
1636\subsection{Buffer Objects \label{bufferObjects}}
1637\sectionauthor{Greg Stein}{gstein@lyra.org}
1638
1639\obindex{buffer}
1640Python objects implemented in C can export a group of functions called
1641the ``buffer\index{buffer interface} interface.'' These functions can
1642be used by an object to expose its data in a raw, byte-oriented
1643format. Clients of the object can use the buffer interface to access
1644the object data directly, without needing to copy it first.
1645
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +00001646Two examples of objects that support
1647the buffer interface are strings and arrays. The string object exposes
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001648the character contents in the buffer interface's byte-oriented
1649form. An array can also expose its contents, but it should be noted
1650that array elements may be multi-byte values.
1651
1652An example user of the buffer interface is the file object's
1653\method{write()} method. Any object that can export a series of bytes
1654through the buffer interface can be written to a file. There are a
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +00001655number of format codes to \cfunction{PyArg_ParseTuple()} that operate
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001656against an object's buffer interface, returning data from the target
1657object.
1658
1659More information on the buffer interface is provided in the section
Fred Drake54e62942001-12-11 19:40:16 +00001660``Buffer Object Structures'' (section~\ref{buffer-structs}), under
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001661the description for \ctype{PyBufferProcs}\ttindex{PyBufferProcs}.
1662
1663A ``buffer object'' is defined in the \file{bufferobject.h} header
1664(included by \file{Python.h}). These objects look very similar to
1665string objects at the Python programming level: they support slicing,
1666indexing, concatenation, and some other standard string
1667operations. However, their data can come from one of two sources: from
1668a block of memory, or from another object which exports the buffer
1669interface.
1670
1671Buffer objects are useful as a way to expose the data from another
1672object's buffer interface to the Python programmer. They can also be
1673used as a zero-copy slicing mechanism. Using their ability to
1674reference a block of memory, it is possible to expose any data to the
1675Python programmer quite easily. The memory could be a large, constant
1676array in a C extension, it could be a raw block of memory for
1677manipulation before passing to an operating system library, or it
1678could be used to pass around structured data in its native, in-memory
1679format.
1680
1681\begin{ctypedesc}{PyBufferObject}
1682 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} represents a buffer object.
1683\end{ctypedesc}
1684
1685\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyBuffer_Type}
1686 The instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} which represents the Python
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +00001687 buffer type; it is the same object as \code{buffer} and
1688 \code{types.BufferType} in the Python layer.
1689 \withsubitem{(in module types)}{\ttindex{BufferType}}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001690\end{cvardesc}
1691
1692\begin{cvardesc}{int}{Py_END_OF_BUFFER}
1693 This constant may be passed as the \var{size} parameter to
1694 \cfunction{PyBuffer_FromObject()} or
1695 \cfunction{PyBuffer_FromReadWriteObject()}. It indicates that the
1696 new \ctype{PyBufferObject} should refer to \var{base} object from
1697 the specified \var{offset} to the end of its exported buffer. Using
1698 this enables the caller to avoid querying the \var{base} object for
1699 its length.
1700\end{cvardesc}
1701
1702\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyBuffer_Check}{PyObject *p}
1703 Return true if the argument has type \cdata{PyBuffer_Type}.
1704\end{cfuncdesc}
1705
1706\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyBuffer_FromObject}{PyObject *base,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001707 Py_ssize_t offset, Py_ssize_t size}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001708 Return a new read-only buffer object. This raises
1709 \exception{TypeError} if \var{base} doesn't support the read-only
1710 buffer protocol or doesn't provide exactly one buffer segment, or it
1711 raises \exception{ValueError} if \var{offset} is less than zero. The
1712 buffer will hold a reference to the \var{base} object, and the
1713 buffer's contents will refer to the \var{base} object's buffer
1714 interface, starting as position \var{offset} and extending for
1715 \var{size} bytes. If \var{size} is \constant{Py_END_OF_BUFFER}, then
1716 the new buffer's contents extend to the length of the \var{base}
1717 object's exported buffer data.
1718\end{cfuncdesc}
1719
1720\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyBuffer_FromReadWriteObject}{PyObject *base,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001721 Py_ssize_t offset,
1722 Py_ssize_t size}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001723 Return a new writable buffer object. Parameters and exceptions are
1724 similar to those for \cfunction{PyBuffer_FromObject()}. If the
1725 \var{base} object does not export the writeable buffer protocol,
1726 then \exception{TypeError} is raised.
1727\end{cfuncdesc}
1728
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001729\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyBuffer_FromMemory}{void *ptr, Py_ssize_t size}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001730 Return a new read-only buffer object that reads from a specified
1731 location in memory, with a specified size. The caller is
1732 responsible for ensuring that the memory buffer, passed in as
1733 \var{ptr}, is not deallocated while the returned buffer object
1734 exists. Raises \exception{ValueError} if \var{size} is less than
1735 zero. Note that \constant{Py_END_OF_BUFFER} may \emph{not} be
1736 passed for the \var{size} parameter; \exception{ValueError} will be
1737 raised in that case.
1738\end{cfuncdesc}
1739
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001740\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyBuffer_FromReadWriteMemory}{void *ptr, Py_ssize_t size}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001741 Similar to \cfunction{PyBuffer_FromMemory()}, but the returned
1742 buffer is writable.
1743\end{cfuncdesc}
1744
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001745\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyBuffer_New}{Py_ssize_t size}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001746 Return a new writable buffer object that maintains its own memory
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001747 buffer of \var{size} bytes. \exception{ValueError} is returned if
Neil Schemenauerd68d3ee2004-06-08 02:58:50 +00001748 \var{size} is not zero or positive. Note that the memory buffer (as
1749 returned by \cfunction{PyObject_AsWriteBuffer()}) is not specifically
1750 aligned.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001751\end{cfuncdesc}
1752
1753
1754\subsection{Tuple Objects \label{tupleObjects}}
1755
1756\obindex{tuple}
1757\begin{ctypedesc}{PyTupleObject}
1758 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} represents a Python tuple object.
1759\end{ctypedesc}
1760
1761\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyTuple_Type}
1762 This instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} represents the Python tuple
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +00001763 type; it is the same object as \code{tuple} and \code{types.TupleType}
1764 in the Python layer.\withsubitem{(in module types)}{\ttindex{TupleType}}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001765\end{cvardesc}
1766
1767\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyTuple_Check}{PyObject *p}
1768 Return true if \var{p} is a tuple object or an instance of a subtype
1769 of the tuple type.
1770 \versionchanged[Allowed subtypes to be accepted]{2.2}
1771\end{cfuncdesc}
1772
1773\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyTuple_CheckExact}{PyObject *p}
1774 Return true if \var{p} is a tuple object, but not an instance of a
1775 subtype of the tuple type.
1776 \versionadded{2.2}
1777\end{cfuncdesc}
1778
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001779\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyTuple_New}{Py_ssize_t len}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001780 Return a new tuple object of size \var{len}, or \NULL{} on failure.
1781\end{cfuncdesc}
1782
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001783\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyTuple_Pack}{Py_ssize_t n, \moreargs}
Raymond Hettingercb2da432003-10-12 18:24:34 +00001784 Return a new tuple object of size \var{n}, or \NULL{} on failure.
1785 The tuple values are initialized to the subsequent \var{n} C arguments
1786 pointing to Python objects. \samp{PyTuple_Pack(2, \var{a}, \var{b})}
1787 is equivalent to \samp{Py_BuildValue("(OO)", \var{a}, \var{b})}.
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00001788 \versionadded{2.4}
Raymond Hettingercb2da432003-10-12 18:24:34 +00001789\end{cfuncdesc}
1790
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001791\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyTuple_Size}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001792 Take a pointer to a tuple object, and return the size of that
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001793 tuple.
1794\end{cfuncdesc}
1795
1796\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyTuple_GET_SIZE}{PyObject *p}
1797 Return the size of the tuple \var{p}, which must be non-\NULL{} and
1798 point to a tuple; no error checking is performed.
1799\end{cfuncdesc}
1800
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001801\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyTuple_GetItem}{PyObject *p, Py_ssize_t pos}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001802 Return the object at position \var{pos} in the tuple pointed to by
1803 \var{p}. If \var{pos} is out of bounds, return \NULL{} and sets an
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001804 \exception{IndexError} exception.
1805\end{cfuncdesc}
1806
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001807\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyTuple_GET_ITEM}{PyObject *p, Py_ssize_t pos}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001808 Like \cfunction{PyTuple_GetItem()}, but does no checking of its
1809 arguments.
1810\end{cfuncdesc}
1811
1812\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyTuple_GetSlice}{PyObject *p,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001813 Py_ssize_t low, Py_ssize_t high}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001814 Take a slice of the tuple pointed to by \var{p} from \var{low} to
1815 \var{high} and return it as a new tuple.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001816\end{cfuncdesc}
1817
1818\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyTuple_SetItem}{PyObject *p,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001819 Py_ssize_t pos, PyObject *o}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001820 Insert a reference to object \var{o} at position \var{pos} of the
1821 tuple pointed to by \var{p}. Return \code{0} on success.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001822 \note{This function ``steals'' a reference to \var{o}.}
1823\end{cfuncdesc}
1824
1825\begin{cfuncdesc}{void}{PyTuple_SET_ITEM}{PyObject *p,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001826 Py_ssize_t pos, PyObject *o}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001827 Like \cfunction{PyTuple_SetItem()}, but does no error checking, and
1828 should \emph{only} be used to fill in brand new tuples. \note{This
1829 function ``steals'' a reference to \var{o}.}
1830\end{cfuncdesc}
1831
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001832\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{_PyTuple_Resize}{PyObject **p, Py_ssize_t newsize}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001833 Can be used to resize a tuple. \var{newsize} will be the new length
1834 of the tuple. Because tuples are \emph{supposed} to be immutable,
1835 this should only be used if there is only one reference to the
1836 object. Do \emph{not} use this if the tuple may already be known to
1837 some other part of the code. The tuple will always grow or shrink
1838 at the end. Think of this as destroying the old tuple and creating
1839 a new one, only more efficiently. Returns \code{0} on success.
1840 Client code should never assume that the resulting value of
1841 \code{*\var{p}} will be the same as before calling this function.
1842 If the object referenced by \code{*\var{p}} is replaced, the
1843 original \code{*\var{p}} is destroyed. On failure, returns
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00001844 \code{-1} and sets \code{*\var{p}} to \NULL{}, and raises
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001845 \exception{MemoryError} or
1846 \exception{SystemError}.
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +00001847 \versionchanged[Removed unused third parameter, \var{last_is_sticky}]{2.2}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001848\end{cfuncdesc}
1849
1850
1851\subsection{List Objects \label{listObjects}}
1852
1853\obindex{list}
1854\begin{ctypedesc}{PyListObject}
1855 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} represents a Python list object.
1856\end{ctypedesc}
1857
1858\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyList_Type}
1859 This instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} represents the Python list
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +00001860 type. This is the same object as \code{list} and \code{types.ListType}
1861 in the Python layer.\withsubitem{(in module types)}{\ttindex{ListType}}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001862\end{cvardesc}
1863
1864\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyList_Check}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001865 Return true if \var{p} is a list object or an instance of a
Andrew MacIntyre13cd8892003-12-25 23:57:52 +00001866 subtype of the list type.
1867 \versionchanged[Allowed subtypes to be accepted]{2.2}
1868\end{cfuncdesc}
1869
1870\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyList_CheckExact}{PyObject *p}
1871 Return true if \var{p} is a list object, but not an instance of a
1872 subtype of the list type.
1873 \versionadded{2.2}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001874\end{cfuncdesc}
1875
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001876\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyList_New}{Py_ssize_t len}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001877 Return a new list of length \var{len} on success, or \NULL{} on
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001878 failure.
Thomas Wouters00ee7ba2006-08-21 19:07:27 +00001879 \note{If \var{length} is greater than zero, the returned list object's
1880 items are set to \code{NULL}. Thus you cannot use abstract
1881 API functions such as \cfunction{PySequence_SetItem()}
1882 or expose the object to Python code before setting all items to a
1883 real object with \cfunction{PyList_SetItem()}.}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001884\end{cfuncdesc}
1885
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001886\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_ssize_t}{PyList_Size}{PyObject *list}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001887 Return the length of the list object in \var{list}; this is
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001888 equivalent to \samp{len(\var{list})} on a list object.
1889 \bifuncindex{len}
1890\end{cfuncdesc}
1891
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001892\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_ssize_t}{PyList_GET_SIZE}{PyObject *list}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001893 Macro form of \cfunction{PyList_Size()} without error checking.
1894\end{cfuncdesc}
1895
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001896\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyList_GetItem}{PyObject *list, Py_ssize_t index}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001897 Return the object at position \var{pos} in the list pointed to by
Thomas Wouters49fd7fa2006-04-21 10:40:58 +00001898 \var{p}. The position must be positive, indexing from the end of the
1899 list is not supported. If \var{pos} is out of bounds, return \NULL{}
1900 and set an \exception{IndexError} exception.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001901\end{cfuncdesc}
1902
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001903\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyList_GET_ITEM}{PyObject *list, Py_ssize_t i}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001904 Macro form of \cfunction{PyList_GetItem()} without error checking.
1905\end{cfuncdesc}
1906
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001907\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyList_SetItem}{PyObject *list, Py_ssize_t index,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001908 PyObject *item}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001909 Set the item at index \var{index} in list to \var{item}. Return
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001910 \code{0} on success or \code{-1} on failure. \note{This function
1911 ``steals'' a reference to \var{item} and discards a reference to an
1912 item already in the list at the affected position.}
1913\end{cfuncdesc}
1914
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001915\begin{cfuncdesc}{void}{PyList_SET_ITEM}{PyObject *list, Py_ssize_t i,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001916 PyObject *o}
1917 Macro form of \cfunction{PyList_SetItem()} without error checking.
1918 This is normally only used to fill in new lists where there is no
1919 previous content.
1920 \note{This function ``steals'' a reference to \var{item}, and,
1921 unlike \cfunction{PyList_SetItem()}, does \emph{not} discard a
1922 reference to any item that it being replaced; any reference in
1923 \var{list} at position \var{i} will be leaked.}
1924\end{cfuncdesc}
1925
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001926\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyList_Insert}{PyObject *list, Py_ssize_t index,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001927 PyObject *item}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001928 Insert the item \var{item} into list \var{list} in front of index
1929 \var{index}. Return \code{0} if successful; return \code{-1} and
1930 set an exception if unsuccessful. Analogous to
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001931 \code{\var{list}.insert(\var{index}, \var{item})}.
1932\end{cfuncdesc}
1933
1934\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyList_Append}{PyObject *list, PyObject *item}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001935 Append the object \var{item} at the end of list \var{list}.
1936 Return \code{0} if successful; return \code{-1} and set an
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001937 exception if unsuccessful. Analogous to
1938 \code{\var{list}.append(\var{item})}.
1939\end{cfuncdesc}
1940
1941\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyList_GetSlice}{PyObject *list,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001942 Py_ssize_t low, Py_ssize_t high}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001943 Return a list of the objects in \var{list} containing the objects
1944 \emph{between} \var{low} and \var{high}. Return \NULL{} and set
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001945 an exception if unsuccessful.
1946 Analogous to \code{\var{list}[\var{low}:\var{high}]}.
1947\end{cfuncdesc}
1948
1949\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyList_SetSlice}{PyObject *list,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00001950 Py_ssize_t low, Py_ssize_t high,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001951 PyObject *itemlist}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001952 Set the slice of \var{list} between \var{low} and \var{high} to the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001953 contents of \var{itemlist}. Analogous to
Raymond Hettinger9c7ed4c2003-10-26 17:20:07 +00001954 \code{\var{list}[\var{low}:\var{high}] = \var{itemlist}}.
1955 The \var{itemlist} may be \NULL{}, indicating the assignment
1956 of an empty list (slice deletion).
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001957 Return \code{0} on success, \code{-1} on failure.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001958\end{cfuncdesc}
1959
1960\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyList_Sort}{PyObject *list}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001961 Sort the items of \var{list} in place. Return \code{0} on
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001962 success, \code{-1} on failure. This is equivalent to
1963 \samp{\var{list}.sort()}.
1964\end{cfuncdesc}
1965
1966\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyList_Reverse}{PyObject *list}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001967 Reverse the items of \var{list} in place. Return \code{0} on
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001968 success, \code{-1} on failure. This is the equivalent of
1969 \samp{\var{list}.reverse()}.
1970\end{cfuncdesc}
1971
1972\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyList_AsTuple}{PyObject *list}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001973 Return a new tuple object containing the contents of \var{list};
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001974 equivalent to \samp{tuple(\var{list})}.\bifuncindex{tuple}
1975\end{cfuncdesc}
1976
1977
1978\section{Mapping Objects \label{mapObjects}}
1979
1980\obindex{mapping}
1981
1982
1983\subsection{Dictionary Objects \label{dictObjects}}
1984
1985\obindex{dictionary}
1986\begin{ctypedesc}{PyDictObject}
1987 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} represents a Python dictionary
1988 object.
1989\end{ctypedesc}
1990
1991\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyDict_Type}
1992 This instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} represents the Python
1993 dictionary type. This is exposed to Python programs as
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +00001994 \code{dict} and \code{types.DictType}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00001995 \withsubitem{(in module types)}{\ttindex{DictType}\ttindex{DictionaryType}}
1996\end{cvardesc}
1997
1998\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDict_Check}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00001999 Return true if \var{p} is a dict object or an instance of a
Andrew MacIntyre13cd8892003-12-25 23:57:52 +00002000 subtype of the dict type.
2001 \versionchanged[Allowed subtypes to be accepted]{2.2}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002002\end{cfuncdesc}
2003
Andrew MacIntyref72af652003-12-26 00:07:51 +00002004\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDict_CheckExact}{PyObject *p}
2005 Return true if \var{p} is a dict object, but not an instance of a
2006 subtype of the dict type.
2007 \versionadded{2.4}
2008\end{cfuncdesc}
2009
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002010\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDict_New}{}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002011 Return a new empty dictionary, or \NULL{} on failure.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002012\end{cfuncdesc}
2013
2014\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDictProxy_New}{PyObject *dict}
2015 Return a proxy object for a mapping which enforces read-only
2016 behavior. This is normally used to create a proxy to prevent
2017 modification of the dictionary for non-dynamic class types.
2018 \versionadded{2.2}
2019\end{cfuncdesc}
2020
2021\begin{cfuncdesc}{void}{PyDict_Clear}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002022 Empty an existing dictionary of all key-value pairs.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002023\end{cfuncdesc}
2024
Raymond Hettingerbc0f2ab2003-11-25 21:12:14 +00002025\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDict_Contains}{PyObject *p, PyObject *key}
2026 Determine if dictionary \var{p} contains \var{key}. If an item
2027 in \var{p} is matches \var{key}, return \code{1}, otherwise return
2028 \code{0}. On error, return \code{-1}. This is equivalent to the
2029 Python expression \samp{\var{key} in \var{p}}.
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002030 \versionadded{2.4}
Raymond Hettingerbc0f2ab2003-11-25 21:12:14 +00002031\end{cfuncdesc}
2032
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002033\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDict_Copy}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002034 Return a new dictionary that contains the same key-value pairs as
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002035 \var{p}.
2036 \versionadded{1.6}
2037\end{cfuncdesc}
2038
2039\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDict_SetItem}{PyObject *p, PyObject *key,
2040 PyObject *val}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002041 Insert \var{value} into the dictionary \var{p} with a key of
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002042 \var{key}. \var{key} must be hashable; if it isn't,
2043 \exception{TypeError} will be raised.
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002044 Return \code{0} on success or \code{-1} on failure.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002045\end{cfuncdesc}
2046
2047\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDict_SetItemString}{PyObject *p,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002048 const char *key,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002049 PyObject *val}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002050 Insert \var{value} into the dictionary \var{p} using \var{key} as a
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002051 key. \var{key} should be a \ctype{char*}. The key object is created
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002052 using \code{PyString_FromString(\var{key})}. Return \code{0} on
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002053 success or \code{-1} on failure.
2054 \ttindex{PyString_FromString()}
2055\end{cfuncdesc}
2056
2057\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDict_DelItem}{PyObject *p, PyObject *key}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002058 Remove the entry in dictionary \var{p} with key \var{key}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002059 \var{key} must be hashable; if it isn't, \exception{TypeError} is
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002060 raised. Return \code{0} on success or \code{-1} on failure.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002061\end{cfuncdesc}
2062
2063\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDict_DelItemString}{PyObject *p, char *key}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002064 Remove the entry in dictionary \var{p} which has a key specified by
2065 the string \var{key}. Return \code{0} on success or \code{-1} on
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002066 failure.
2067\end{cfuncdesc}
2068
2069\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDict_GetItem}{PyObject *p, PyObject *key}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002070 Return the object from dictionary \var{p} which has a key
2071 \var{key}. Return \NULL{} if the key \var{key} is not present, but
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002072 \emph{without} setting an exception.
2073\end{cfuncdesc}
2074
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002075\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDict_GetItemString}{PyObject *p, const char *key}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002076 This is the same as \cfunction{PyDict_GetItem()}, but \var{key} is
2077 specified as a \ctype{char*}, rather than a \ctype{PyObject*}.
2078\end{cfuncdesc}
2079
2080\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDict_Items}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002081 Return a \ctype{PyListObject} containing all the items from the
Nicholas Bastin975e7252004-09-29 21:39:26 +00002082 dictionary, as in the dictionary method \method{items()} (see the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002083 \citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference}).
2084\end{cfuncdesc}
2085
2086\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDict_Keys}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002087 Return a \ctype{PyListObject} containing all the keys from the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002088 dictionary, as in the dictionary method \method{keys()} (see the
2089 \citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference}).
2090\end{cfuncdesc}
2091
2092\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDict_Values}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002093 Return a \ctype{PyListObject} containing all the values from the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002094 dictionary \var{p}, as in the dictionary method \method{values()}
2095 (see the \citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference}).
2096\end{cfuncdesc}
2097
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002098\begin{cfuncdesc}{Py_ssize_t}{PyDict_Size}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002099 Return the number of items in the dictionary. This is equivalent
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002100 to \samp{len(\var{p})} on a dictionary.\bifuncindex{len}
2101\end{cfuncdesc}
2102
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002103\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDict_Next}{PyObject *p, Py_ssize_t *ppos,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002104 PyObject **pkey, PyObject **pvalue}
2105 Iterate over all key-value pairs in the dictionary \var{p}. The
2106 \ctype{int} referred to by \var{ppos} must be initialized to
2107 \code{0} prior to the first call to this function to start the
2108 iteration; the function returns true for each pair in the
2109 dictionary, and false once all pairs have been reported. The
2110 parameters \var{pkey} and \var{pvalue} should either point to
2111 \ctype{PyObject*} variables that will be filled in with each key and
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002112 value, respectively, or may be \NULL{}. Any references returned through
Raymond Hettinger54693242003-12-13 19:48:41 +00002113 them are borrowed. \var{ppos} should not be altered during iteration.
2114 Its value represents offsets within the internal dictionary structure,
2115 and since the structure is sparse, the offsets are not consecutive.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002116
2117 For example:
2118
2119\begin{verbatim}
2120PyObject *key, *value;
Thomas Woutersb2137042007-02-01 18:02:27 +00002121Py_ssize_t pos = 0;
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002122
2123while (PyDict_Next(self->dict, &pos, &key, &value)) {
2124 /* do something interesting with the values... */
2125 ...
2126}
2127\end{verbatim}
2128
2129 The dictionary \var{p} should not be mutated during iteration. It
2130 is safe (since Python 2.1) to modify the values of the keys as you
2131 iterate over the dictionary, but only so long as the set of keys
2132 does not change. For example:
2133
2134\begin{verbatim}
2135PyObject *key, *value;
Thomas Woutersb2137042007-02-01 18:02:27 +00002136Py_ssize_t pos = 0;
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002137
2138while (PyDict_Next(self->dict, &pos, &key, &value)) {
2139 int i = PyInt_AS_LONG(value) + 1;
2140 PyObject *o = PyInt_FromLong(i);
2141 if (o == NULL)
2142 return -1;
2143 if (PyDict_SetItem(self->dict, key, o) < 0) {
2144 Py_DECREF(o);
2145 return -1;
2146 }
2147 Py_DECREF(o);
2148}
2149\end{verbatim}
2150\end{cfuncdesc}
2151
2152\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDict_Merge}{PyObject *a, PyObject *b, int override}
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +00002153 Iterate over mapping object \var{b} adding key-value pairs to dictionary
2154 \var{a}.
2155 \var{b} may be a dictionary, or any object supporting
2156 \function{PyMapping_Keys()} and \function{PyObject_GetItem()}.
2157 If \var{override} is true, existing pairs in \var{a} will
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002158 be replaced if a matching key is found in \var{b}, otherwise pairs
2159 will only be added if there is not a matching key in \var{a}.
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +00002160 Return \code{0} on success or \code{-1} if an exception was
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002161 raised.
2162\versionadded{2.2}
2163\end{cfuncdesc}
2164
2165\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDict_Update}{PyObject *a, PyObject *b}
2166 This is the same as \code{PyDict_Merge(\var{a}, \var{b}, 1)} in C,
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +00002167 or \code{\var{a}.update(\var{b})} in Python. Return \code{0} on
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002168 success or \code{-1} if an exception was raised.
2169 \versionadded{2.2}
2170\end{cfuncdesc}
2171
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +00002172\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDict_MergeFromSeq2}{PyObject *a, PyObject *seq2,
2173 int override}
2174 Update or merge into dictionary \var{a}, from the key-value pairs in
2175 \var{seq2}. \var{seq2} must be an iterable object producing
2176 iterable objects of length 2, viewed as key-value pairs. In case of
2177 duplicate keys, the last wins if \var{override} is true, else the
2178 first wins.
2179 Return \code{0} on success or \code{-1} if an exception
2180 was raised.
2181 Equivalent Python (except for the return value):
2182
2183\begin{verbatim}
2184def PyDict_MergeFromSeq2(a, seq2, override):
2185 for key, value in seq2:
2186 if override or key not in a:
2187 a[key] = value
2188\end{verbatim}
2189
2190 \versionadded{2.2}
2191\end{cfuncdesc}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002192
Fred Drake54e62942001-12-11 19:40:16 +00002193
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002194\section{Other Objects \label{otherObjects}}
2195
Guido van Rossumd8faa362007-04-27 19:54:29 +00002196\subsection{Class Objects \label{classObjects}}
2197
2198\obindex{class}
2199Note that the class objects described here represent old-style classes,
2200which will go away in Python 3. When creating new types for extension
2201modules, you will want to work with type objects (section
2202\ref{typeObjects}).
2203
2204\begin{ctypedesc}{PyClassObject}
2205 The C structure of the objects used to describe built-in classes.
2206\end{ctypedesc}
2207
2208\begin{cvardesc}{PyObject*}{PyClass_Type}
2209 This is the type object for class objects; it is the same object as
2210 \code{types.ClassType} in the Python layer.
2211 \withsubitem{(in module types)}{\ttindex{ClassType}}
2212\end{cvardesc}
2213
2214\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyClass_Check}{PyObject *o}
2215 Return true if the object \var{o} is a class object, including
2216 instances of types derived from the standard class object. Return
2217 false in all other cases.
2218\end{cfuncdesc}
2219
2220\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyClass_IsSubclass}{PyObject *klass, PyObject *base}
2221 Return true if \var{klass} is a subclass of \var{base}. Return false in
2222 all other cases.
2223\end{cfuncdesc}
2224
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002225\subsection{File Objects \label{fileObjects}}
2226
2227\obindex{file}
2228Python's built-in file objects are implemented entirely on the
2229\ctype{FILE*} support from the C standard library. This is an
2230implementation detail and may change in future releases of Python.
2231
2232\begin{ctypedesc}{PyFileObject}
2233 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} represents a Python file object.
2234\end{ctypedesc}
2235
2236\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyFile_Type}
2237 This instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} represents the Python file
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +00002238 type. This is exposed to Python programs as \code{file} and
2239 \code{types.FileType}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002240 \withsubitem{(in module types)}{\ttindex{FileType}}
2241\end{cvardesc}
2242
2243\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyFile_Check}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002244 Return true if its argument is a \ctype{PyFileObject} or a subtype
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002245 of \ctype{PyFileObject}.
2246 \versionchanged[Allowed subtypes to be accepted]{2.2}
2247\end{cfuncdesc}
2248
2249\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyFile_CheckExact}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002250 Return true if its argument is a \ctype{PyFileObject}, but not a
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002251 subtype of \ctype{PyFileObject}.
2252 \versionadded{2.2}
2253\end{cfuncdesc}
2254
2255\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFile_FromString}{char *filename, char *mode}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002256 On success, return a new file object that is opened on the file
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002257 given by \var{filename}, with a file mode given by \var{mode}, where
2258 \var{mode} has the same semantics as the standard C routine
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002259 \cfunction{fopen()}\ttindex{fopen()}. On failure, return \NULL{}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002260\end{cfuncdesc}
2261
2262\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFile_FromFile}{FILE *fp,
2263 char *name, char *mode,
2264 int (*close)(FILE*)}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002265 Create a new \ctype{PyFileObject} from the already-open standard C
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002266 file pointer, \var{fp}. The function \var{close} will be called
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002267 when the file should be closed. Return \NULL{} on failure.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002268\end{cfuncdesc}
2269
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002270\begin{cfuncdesc}{FILE*}{PyFile_AsFile}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002271 Return the file object associated with \var{p} as a \ctype{FILE*}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002272\end{cfuncdesc}
2273
2274\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFile_GetLine}{PyObject *p, int n}
2275 Equivalent to \code{\var{p}.readline(\optional{\var{n}})}, this
2276 function reads one line from the object \var{p}. \var{p} may be a
2277 file object or any object with a \method{readline()} method. If
2278 \var{n} is \code{0}, exactly one line is read, regardless of the
2279 length of the line. If \var{n} is greater than \code{0}, no more
2280 than \var{n} bytes will be read from the file; a partial line can be
2281 returned. In both cases, an empty string is returned if the end of
2282 the file is reached immediately. If \var{n} is less than \code{0},
2283 however, one line is read regardless of length, but
2284 \exception{EOFError} is raised if the end of the file is reached
2285 immediately.
2286 \withsubitem{(built-in exception)}{\ttindex{EOFError}}
2287\end{cfuncdesc}
2288
2289\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFile_Name}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002290 Return the name of the file specified by \var{p} as a string
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002291 object.
2292\end{cfuncdesc}
2293
2294\begin{cfuncdesc}{void}{PyFile_SetBufSize}{PyFileObject *p, int n}
2295 Available on systems with \cfunction{setvbuf()}\ttindex{setvbuf()}
2296 only. This should only be called immediately after file object
2297 creation.
2298\end{cfuncdesc}
2299
Martin v. Löwis5467d4c2003-05-10 07:10:12 +00002300\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyFile_Encoding}{PyFileObject *p, char *enc}
2301 Set the file's encoding for Unicode output to \var{enc}. Return
2302 1 on success and 0 on failure.
2303 \versionadded{2.3}
2304\end{cfuncdesc}
2305
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002306\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyFile_SoftSpace}{PyObject *p, int newflag}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002307 This function exists for internal use by the interpreter. Set the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002308 \member{softspace} attribute of \var{p} to \var{newflag} and
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002309 \withsubitem{(file attribute)}{\ttindex{softspace}}return the
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002310 previous value. \var{p} does not have to be a file object for this
2311 function to work properly; any object is supported (thought its only
2312 interesting if the \member{softspace} attribute can be set). This
2313 function clears any errors, and will return \code{0} as the previous
2314 value if the attribute either does not exist or if there were errors
2315 in retrieving it. There is no way to detect errors from this
2316 function, but doing so should not be needed.
2317\end{cfuncdesc}
2318
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002319\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyFile_WriteObject}{PyObject *obj, PyObject *p,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002320 int flags}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002321 Write object \var{obj} to file object \var{p}. The only supported
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002322 flag for \var{flags} is
2323 \constant{Py_PRINT_RAW}\ttindex{Py_PRINT_RAW}; if given, the
2324 \function{str()} of the object is written instead of the
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002325 \function{repr()}. Return \code{0} on success or \code{-1} on
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002326 failure; the appropriate exception will be set.
2327\end{cfuncdesc}
2328
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002329\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyFile_WriteString}{const char *s, PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002330 Write string \var{s} to file object \var{p}. Return \code{0} on
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002331 success or \code{-1} on failure; the appropriate exception will be
2332 set.
2333\end{cfuncdesc}
2334
2335
2336\subsection{Instance Objects \label{instanceObjects}}
2337
2338\obindex{instance}
2339There are very few functions specific to instance objects.
2340
2341\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyInstance_Type}
2342 Type object for class instances.
2343\end{cvardesc}
2344
2345\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyInstance_Check}{PyObject *obj}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002346 Return true if \var{obj} is an instance.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002347\end{cfuncdesc}
2348
2349\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyInstance_New}{PyObject *class,
2350 PyObject *arg,
2351 PyObject *kw}
2352 Create a new instance of a specific class. The parameters \var{arg}
2353 and \var{kw} are used as the positional and keyword parameters to
2354 the object's constructor.
2355\end{cfuncdesc}
2356
2357\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyInstance_NewRaw}{PyObject *class,
2358 PyObject *dict}
Neil Schemenauerc4932292005-06-18 17:54:13 +00002359 Create a new instance of a specific class without calling its
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002360 constructor. \var{class} is the class of new object. The
2361 \var{dict} parameter will be used as the object's \member{__dict__};
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002362 if \NULL{}, a new dictionary will be created for the instance.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002363\end{cfuncdesc}
2364
2365
Georg Brandl9b743f52006-02-20 12:57:53 +00002366\subsection{Function Objects \label{function-objects}}
2367
2368\obindex{function}
2369There are a few functions specific to Python functions.
2370
2371\begin{ctypedesc}{PyFunctionObject}
2372 The C structure used for functions.
2373\end{ctypedesc}
2374
2375\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyFunction_Type}
2376 This is an instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} and represents the
2377 Python function type. It is exposed to Python programmers as
2378 \code{types.FunctionType}.
2379 \withsubitem{(in module types)}{\ttindex{MethodType}}
2380\end{cvardesc}
2381
2382\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyFunction_Check}{PyObject *o}
2383 Return true if \var{o} is a function object (has type
2384 \cdata{PyFunction_Type}). The parameter must not be \NULL{}.
2385\end{cfuncdesc}
2386
2387\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFunction_New}{PyObject *code,
2388 PyObject *globals}
2389 Return a new function object associated with the code object
Thomas Wouters49fd7fa2006-04-21 10:40:58 +00002390 \var{code}. \var{globals} must be a dictionary with the global
2391 variables accessible to the function.
Georg Brandl9b743f52006-02-20 12:57:53 +00002392
2393 The function's docstring, name and \var{__module__} are retrieved
2394 from the code object, the argument defaults and closure are set to
2395 \NULL{}.
2396\end{cfuncdesc}
2397
2398\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFunction_GetCode}{PyObject *op}
2399 Return the code object associated with the function object \var{op}.
2400\end{cfuncdesc}
2401
2402\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFunction_GetGlobals}{PyObject *op}
2403 Return the globals dictionary associated with the function object
2404 \var{op}.
2405\end{cfuncdesc}
2406
2407\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFunction_GetModule}{PyObject *op}
2408 Return the \var{__module__} attribute of the function object \var{op}.
2409 This is normally a string containing the module name, but can be set
2410 to any other object by Python code.
2411\end{cfuncdesc}
2412
2413\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFunction_GetDefaults}{PyObject *op}
2414 Return the argument default values of the function object \var{op}.
2415 This can be a tuple of arguments or \NULL{}.
2416\end{cfuncdesc}
2417
2418\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyFunction_SetDefaults}{PyObject *op,
2419 PyObject *defaults}
2420 Set the argument default values for the function object \var{op}.
2421 \var{defaults} must be \var{Py_None} or a tuple.
2422
2423 Raises \exception{SystemError} and returns \code{-1} on failure.
2424\end{cfuncdesc}
2425
2426\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFunction_GetClosure}{PyObject *op}
2427 Return the closure associated with the function object \var{op}.
2428 This can be \NULL{} or a tuple of cell objects.
2429\end{cfuncdesc}
2430
2431\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyFunction_SetClosure}{PyObject *op,
2432 PyObject *closure}
2433 Set the closure associated with the function object \var{op}.
2434 \var{closure} must be \var{Py_None} or a tuple of cell objects.
2435
2436 Raises \exception{SystemError} and returns \code{-1} on failure.
2437\end{cfuncdesc}
2438
2439
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002440\subsection{Method Objects \label{method-objects}}
2441
2442\obindex{method}
2443There are some useful functions that are useful for working with
2444method objects.
2445
2446\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyMethod_Type}
2447 This instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} represents the Python method
2448 type. This is exposed to Python programs as \code{types.MethodType}.
2449 \withsubitem{(in module types)}{\ttindex{MethodType}}
2450\end{cvardesc}
2451
2452\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyMethod_Check}{PyObject *o}
2453 Return true if \var{o} is a method object (has type
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002454 \cdata{PyMethod_Type}). The parameter must not be \NULL{}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002455\end{cfuncdesc}
2456
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002457\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyMethod_New}{PyObject *func,
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002458 PyObject *self, PyObject *class}
2459 Return a new method object, with \var{func} being any callable
2460 object; this is the function that will be called when the method is
2461 called. If this method should be bound to an instance, \var{self}
2462 should be the instance and \var{class} should be the class of
2463 \var{self}, otherwise \var{self} should be \NULL{} and \var{class}
2464 should be the class which provides the unbound method..
2465\end{cfuncdesc}
2466
2467\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyMethod_Class}{PyObject *meth}
2468 Return the class object from which the method \var{meth} was
2469 created; if this was created from an instance, it will be the class
2470 of the instance.
2471\end{cfuncdesc}
2472
2473\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyMethod_GET_CLASS}{PyObject *meth}
2474 Macro version of \cfunction{PyMethod_Class()} which avoids error
2475 checking.
2476\end{cfuncdesc}
2477
2478\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyMethod_Function}{PyObject *meth}
2479 Return the function object associated with the method \var{meth}.
2480\end{cfuncdesc}
2481
2482\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyMethod_GET_FUNCTION}{PyObject *meth}
2483 Macro version of \cfunction{PyMethod_Function()} which avoids error
2484 checking.
2485\end{cfuncdesc}
2486
2487\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyMethod_Self}{PyObject *meth}
2488 Return the instance associated with the method \var{meth} if it is
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002489 bound, otherwise return \NULL{}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002490\end{cfuncdesc}
2491
2492\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyMethod_GET_SELF}{PyObject *meth}
2493 Macro version of \cfunction{PyMethod_Self()} which avoids error
2494 checking.
2495\end{cfuncdesc}
2496
2497
2498\subsection{Module Objects \label{moduleObjects}}
2499
2500\obindex{module}
2501There are only a few functions special to module objects.
2502
2503\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyModule_Type}
2504 This instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} represents the Python module
2505 type. This is exposed to Python programs as
2506 \code{types.ModuleType}.
2507 \withsubitem{(in module types)}{\ttindex{ModuleType}}
2508\end{cvardesc}
2509
2510\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyModule_Check}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002511 Return true if \var{p} is a module object, or a subtype of a module
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002512 object.
2513 \versionchanged[Allowed subtypes to be accepted]{2.2}
2514\end{cfuncdesc}
2515
2516\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyModule_CheckExact}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002517 Return true if \var{p} is a module object, but not a subtype of
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002518 \cdata{PyModule_Type}.
2519 \versionadded{2.2}
2520\end{cfuncdesc}
2521
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002522\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyModule_New}{const char *name}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002523 Return a new module object with the \member{__name__} attribute set
2524 to \var{name}. Only the module's \member{__doc__} and
2525 \member{__name__} attributes are filled in; the caller is
2526 responsible for providing a \member{__file__} attribute.
2527 \withsubitem{(module attribute)}{
2528 \ttindex{__name__}\ttindex{__doc__}\ttindex{__file__}}
2529\end{cfuncdesc}
2530
2531\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyModule_GetDict}{PyObject *module}
2532 Return the dictionary object that implements \var{module}'s
2533 namespace; this object is the same as the \member{__dict__}
2534 attribute of the module object. This function never fails.
2535 \withsubitem{(module attribute)}{\ttindex{__dict__}}
Fred Drakef495ef72002-04-12 19:32:07 +00002536 It is recommended extensions use other \cfunction{PyModule_*()}
2537 and \cfunction{PyObject_*()} functions rather than directly
2538 manipulate a module's \member{__dict__}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002539\end{cfuncdesc}
2540
2541\begin{cfuncdesc}{char*}{PyModule_GetName}{PyObject *module}
2542 Return \var{module}'s \member{__name__} value. If the module does
2543 not provide one, or if it is not a string, \exception{SystemError}
2544 is raised and \NULL{} is returned.
2545 \withsubitem{(module attribute)}{\ttindex{__name__}}
2546 \withsubitem{(built-in exception)}{\ttindex{SystemError}}
2547\end{cfuncdesc}
2548
2549\begin{cfuncdesc}{char*}{PyModule_GetFilename}{PyObject *module}
2550 Return the name of the file from which \var{module} was loaded using
2551 \var{module}'s \member{__file__} attribute. If this is not defined,
2552 or if it is not a string, raise \exception{SystemError} and return
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002553 \NULL{}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002554 \withsubitem{(module attribute)}{\ttindex{__file__}}
2555 \withsubitem{(built-in exception)}{\ttindex{SystemError}}
2556\end{cfuncdesc}
2557
2558\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyModule_AddObject}{PyObject *module,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002559 const char *name, PyObject *value}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002560 Add an object to \var{module} as \var{name}. This is a convenience
2561 function which can be used from the module's initialization
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002562 function. This steals a reference to \var{value}. Return
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002563 \code{-1} on error, \code{0} on success.
2564 \versionadded{2.0}
2565\end{cfuncdesc}
2566
2567\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyModule_AddIntConstant}{PyObject *module,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002568 const char *name, long value}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002569 Add an integer constant to \var{module} as \var{name}. This
2570 convenience function can be used from the module's initialization
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002571 function. Return \code{-1} on error, \code{0} on success.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002572 \versionadded{2.0}
2573\end{cfuncdesc}
2574
2575\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyModule_AddStringConstant}{PyObject *module,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002576 const char *name, const char *value}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002577 Add a string constant to \var{module} as \var{name}. This
2578 convenience function can be used from the module's initialization
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002579 function. The string \var{value} must be null-terminated. Return
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002580 \code{-1} on error, \code{0} on success.
2581 \versionadded{2.0}
2582\end{cfuncdesc}
2583
2584
2585\subsection{Iterator Objects \label{iterator-objects}}
2586
2587Python provides two general-purpose iterator objects. The first, a
2588sequence iterator, works with an arbitrary sequence supporting the
2589\method{__getitem__()} method. The second works with a callable
2590object and a sentinel value, calling the callable for each item in the
2591sequence, and ending the iteration when the sentinel value is
2592returned.
2593
2594\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PySeqIter_Type}
2595 Type object for iterator objects returned by
2596 \cfunction{PySeqIter_New()} and the one-argument form of the
2597 \function{iter()} built-in function for built-in sequence types.
2598 \versionadded{2.2}
2599\end{cvardesc}
2600
2601\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PySeqIter_Check}{op}
2602 Return true if the type of \var{op} is \cdata{PySeqIter_Type}.
2603 \versionadded{2.2}
2604\end{cfuncdesc}
2605
2606\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PySeqIter_New}{PyObject *seq}
2607 Return an iterator that works with a general sequence object,
2608 \var{seq}. The iteration ends when the sequence raises
2609 \exception{IndexError} for the subscripting operation.
2610 \versionadded{2.2}
2611\end{cfuncdesc}
2612
2613\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyCallIter_Type}
2614 Type object for iterator objects returned by
2615 \cfunction{PyCallIter_New()} and the two-argument form of the
2616 \function{iter()} built-in function.
2617 \versionadded{2.2}
2618\end{cvardesc}
2619
2620\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyCallIter_Check}{op}
2621 Return true if the type of \var{op} is \cdata{PyCallIter_Type}.
2622 \versionadded{2.2}
2623\end{cfuncdesc}
2624
2625\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyCallIter_New}{PyObject *callable,
2626 PyObject *sentinel}
2627 Return a new iterator. The first parameter, \var{callable}, can be
2628 any Python callable object that can be called with no parameters;
2629 each call to it should return the next item in the iteration. When
2630 \var{callable} returns a value equal to \var{sentinel}, the
2631 iteration will be terminated.
2632 \versionadded{2.2}
2633\end{cfuncdesc}
2634
2635
2636\subsection{Descriptor Objects \label{descriptor-objects}}
2637
Fred Drake54e62942001-12-11 19:40:16 +00002638``Descriptors'' are objects that describe some attribute of an object.
2639They are found in the dictionary of type objects.
2640
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002641\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyProperty_Type}
Fred Drake54e62942001-12-11 19:40:16 +00002642 The type object for the built-in descriptor types.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002643 \versionadded{2.2}
2644\end{cvardesc}
2645
2646\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDescr_NewGetSet}{PyTypeObject *type,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002647 struct PyGetSetDef *getset}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002648 \versionadded{2.2}
2649\end{cfuncdesc}
2650
2651\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDescr_NewMember}{PyTypeObject *type,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002652 struct PyMemberDef *meth}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002653 \versionadded{2.2}
2654\end{cfuncdesc}
2655
2656\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDescr_NewMethod}{PyTypeObject *type,
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002657 struct PyMethodDef *meth}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002658 \versionadded{2.2}
2659\end{cfuncdesc}
2660
2661\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDescr_NewWrapper}{PyTypeObject *type,
2662 struct wrapperbase *wrapper,
2663 void *wrapped}
2664 \versionadded{2.2}
2665\end{cfuncdesc}
2666
Thomas Heller8178a222004-02-09 10:47:11 +00002667\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDescr_NewClassMethod}{PyTypeObject *type,
2668 PyMethodDef *method}
2669 \versionadded{2.3}
2670\end{cfuncdesc}
2671
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002672\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDescr_IsData}{PyObject *descr}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002673 Return true if the descriptor objects \var{descr} describes a data
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002674 attribute, or false if it describes a method. \var{descr} must be a
2675 descriptor object; there is no error checking.
2676 \versionadded{2.2}
2677\end{cfuncdesc}
2678
2679\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyWrapper_New}{PyObject *, PyObject *}
2680 \versionadded{2.2}
2681\end{cfuncdesc}
2682
2683
2684\subsection{Slice Objects \label{slice-objects}}
2685
2686\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PySlice_Type}
2687 The type object for slice objects. This is the same as
Thomas Wouters0e3f5912006-08-11 14:57:12 +00002688 \code{slice} and \code{types.SliceType}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002689 \withsubitem{(in module types)}{\ttindex{SliceType}}
2690\end{cvardesc}
2691
2692\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PySlice_Check}{PyObject *ob}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002693 Return true if \var{ob} is a slice object; \var{ob} must not be
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002694 \NULL{}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002695\end{cfuncdesc}
2696
2697\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PySlice_New}{PyObject *start, PyObject *stop,
2698 PyObject *step}
2699 Return a new slice object with the given values. The \var{start},
2700 \var{stop}, and \var{step} parameters are used as the values of the
2701 slice object attributes of the same names. Any of the values may be
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002702 \NULL{}, in which case the \code{None} will be used for the
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002703 corresponding attribute. Return \NULL{} if the new object could
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002704 not be allocated.
2705\end{cfuncdesc}
2706
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002707\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PySlice_GetIndices}{PySliceObject *slice, Py_ssize_t length,
2708 Py_ssize_t *start, Py_ssize_t *stop, Py_ssize_t *step}
Michael W. Hudson5efaf7e2002-06-11 10:55:12 +00002709Retrieve the start, stop and step indices from the slice object
2710\var{slice}, assuming a sequence of length \var{length}. Treats
2711indices greater than \var{length} as errors.
2712
2713Returns 0 on success and -1 on error with no exception set (unless one
2714of the indices was not \constant{None} and failed to be converted to
2715an integer, in which case -1 is returned with an exception set).
2716
2717You probably do not want to use this function. If you want to use
2718slice objects in versions of Python prior to 2.3, you would probably
2719do well to incorporate the source of \cfunction{PySlice_GetIndicesEx},
2720suitably renamed, in the source of your extension.
2721\end{cfuncdesc}
2722
Martin v. Löwis29fafd82006-03-01 05:16:03 +00002723\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PySlice_GetIndicesEx}{PySliceObject *slice, Py_ssize_t length,
2724 Py_ssize_t *start, Py_ssize_t *stop, Py_ssize_t *step,
2725 Py_ssize_t *slicelength}
Michael W. Hudson5efaf7e2002-06-11 10:55:12 +00002726Usable replacement for \cfunction{PySlice_GetIndices}. Retrieve the
2727start, stop, and step indices from the slice object \var{slice}
2728assuming a sequence of length \var{length}, and store the length of
2729the slice in \var{slicelength}. Out of bounds indices are clipped in
2730a manner consistent with the handling of normal slices.
2731
2732Returns 0 on success and -1 on error with exception set.
2733
2734\versionadded{2.3}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002735\end{cfuncdesc}
2736
2737
2738\subsection{Weak Reference Objects \label{weakref-objects}}
2739
2740Python supports \emph{weak references} as first-class objects. There
2741are two specific object types which directly implement weak
2742references. The first is a simple reference object, and the second
2743acts as a proxy for the original object as much as it can.
2744
2745\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyWeakref_Check}{ob}
2746 Return true if \var{ob} is either a reference or proxy object.
2747 \versionadded{2.2}
2748\end{cfuncdesc}
2749
2750\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyWeakref_CheckRef}{ob}
2751 Return true if \var{ob} is a reference object.
2752 \versionadded{2.2}
2753\end{cfuncdesc}
2754
2755\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyWeakref_CheckProxy}{ob}
2756 Return true if \var{ob} is a proxy object.
2757 \versionadded{2.2}
2758\end{cfuncdesc}
2759
2760\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyWeakref_NewRef}{PyObject *ob,
2761 PyObject *callback}
2762 Return a weak reference object for the object \var{ob}. This will
2763 always return a new reference, but is not guaranteed to create a new
2764 object; an existing reference object may be returned. The second
2765 parameter, \var{callback}, can be a callable object that receives
2766 notification when \var{ob} is garbage collected; it should accept a
Raymond Hettinger5232f502004-03-25 08:51:36 +00002767 single parameter, which will be the weak reference object itself.
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002768 \var{callback} may also be \code{None} or \NULL{}. If \var{ob}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002769 is not a weakly-referencable object, or if \var{callback} is not
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002770 callable, \code{None}, or \NULL{}, this will return \NULL{} and
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002771 raise \exception{TypeError}.
2772 \versionadded{2.2}
2773\end{cfuncdesc}
2774
2775\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyWeakref_NewProxy}{PyObject *ob,
2776 PyObject *callback}
2777 Return a weak reference proxy object for the object \var{ob}. This
2778 will always return a new reference, but is not guaranteed to create
2779 a new object; an existing proxy object may be returned. The second
2780 parameter, \var{callback}, can be a callable object that receives
2781 notification when \var{ob} is garbage collected; it should accept a
Raymond Hettinger5232f502004-03-25 08:51:36 +00002782 single parameter, which will be the weak reference object itself.
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002783 \var{callback} may also be \code{None} or \NULL{}. If \var{ob} is not
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002784 a weakly-referencable object, or if \var{callback} is not callable,
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002785 \code{None}, or \NULL{}, this will return \NULL{} and raise
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002786 \exception{TypeError}.
2787 \versionadded{2.2}
2788\end{cfuncdesc}
2789
2790\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyWeakref_GetObject}{PyObject *ref}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00002791 Return the referenced object from a weak reference, \var{ref}. If
Ka-Ping Yeebd379e92003-03-28 18:07:16 +00002792 the referent is no longer live, returns \code{None}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002793 \versionadded{2.2}
2794\end{cfuncdesc}
2795
2796\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyWeakref_GET_OBJECT}{PyObject *ref}
2797 Similar to \cfunction{PyWeakref_GetObject()}, but implemented as a
2798 macro that does no error checking.
2799 \versionadded{2.2}
2800\end{cfuncdesc}
2801
2802
2803\subsection{CObjects \label{cObjects}}
2804
2805\obindex{CObject}
2806Refer to \emph{Extending and Embedding the Python Interpreter},
Fred Drake54e62942001-12-11 19:40:16 +00002807section~1.12, ``Providing a C API for an Extension Module,'' for more
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002808information on using these objects.
2809
2810
2811\begin{ctypedesc}{PyCObject}
2812 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} represents an opaque value, useful
2813 for C extension modules who need to pass an opaque value (as a
2814 \ctype{void*} pointer) through Python code to other C code. It is
2815 often used to make a C function pointer defined in one module
2816 available to other modules, so the regular import mechanism can be
2817 used to access C APIs defined in dynamically loaded modules.
2818\end{ctypedesc}
2819
2820\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyCObject_Check}{PyObject *p}
Martin v. Löwis01a74b22003-10-19 18:30:01 +00002821 Return true if its argument is a \ctype{PyCObject}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002822\end{cfuncdesc}
2823
Tim Petersf582b822001-12-11 18:51:08 +00002824\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyCObject_FromVoidPtr}{void* cobj,
Fred Drake54e62942001-12-11 19:40:16 +00002825 void (*destr)(void *)}
Martin v. Löwis01a74b22003-10-19 18:30:01 +00002826 Create a \ctype{PyCObject} from the \code{void *}\var{cobj}. The
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002827 \var{destr} function will be called when the object is reclaimed,
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002828 unless it is \NULL{}.
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002829\end{cfuncdesc}
2830
2831\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyCObject_FromVoidPtrAndDesc}{void* cobj,
2832 void* desc, void (*destr)(void *, void *)}
Martin v. Löwis01a74b22003-10-19 18:30:01 +00002833 Create a \ctype{PyCObject} from the \ctype{void *}\var{cobj}. The
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002834 \var{destr} function will be called when the object is reclaimed.
2835 The \var{desc} argument can be used to pass extra callback data for
2836 the destructor function.
2837\end{cfuncdesc}
2838
2839\begin{cfuncdesc}{void*}{PyCObject_AsVoidPtr}{PyObject* self}
Martin v. Löwis01a74b22003-10-19 18:30:01 +00002840 Return the object \ctype{void *} that the \ctype{PyCObject}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002841 \var{self} was created with.
2842\end{cfuncdesc}
2843
2844\begin{cfuncdesc}{void*}{PyCObject_GetDesc}{PyObject* self}
Martin v. Löwis01a74b22003-10-19 18:30:01 +00002845 Return the description \ctype{void *} that the \ctype{PyCObject}
Fred Drake3adf79e2001-10-12 19:01:43 +00002846 \var{self} was created with.
2847\end{cfuncdesc}
Fred Drakecd8474e2001-11-26 21:29:17 +00002848
Martin v. Löwis01a74b22003-10-19 18:30:01 +00002849\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyCObject_SetVoidPtr}{PyObject* self, void* cobj}
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002850 Set the void pointer inside \var{self} to \var{cobj}.
Martin v. Löwis01a74b22003-10-19 18:30:01 +00002851 The \ctype{PyCObject} must not have an associated destructor.
2852 Return true on success, false on failure.
2853\end{cfuncdesc}
2854
Fred Drakecd8474e2001-11-26 21:29:17 +00002855
2856\subsection{Cell Objects \label{cell-objects}}
2857
2858``Cell'' objects are used to implement variables referenced by
2859multiple scopes. For each such variable, a cell object is created to
2860store the value; the local variables of each stack frame that
2861references the value contains a reference to the cells from outer
2862scopes which also use that variable. When the value is accessed, the
2863value contained in the cell is used instead of the cell object
2864itself. This de-referencing of the cell object requires support from
2865the generated byte-code; these are not automatically de-referenced
2866when accessed. Cell objects are not likely to be useful elsewhere.
2867
Fred Drake54e62942001-12-11 19:40:16 +00002868\begin{ctypedesc}{PyCellObject}
2869 The C structure used for cell objects.
2870\end{ctypedesc}
2871
Fred Drakecd8474e2001-11-26 21:29:17 +00002872\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyCell_Type}
Georg Brandl9b743f52006-02-20 12:57:53 +00002873 The type object corresponding to cell objects.
Fred Drakecd8474e2001-11-26 21:29:17 +00002874\end{cvardesc}
2875
2876\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyCell_Check}{ob}
2877 Return true if \var{ob} is a cell object; \var{ob} must not be
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002878 \NULL{}.
Fred Drakecd8474e2001-11-26 21:29:17 +00002879\end{cfuncdesc}
2880
2881\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyCell_New}{PyObject *ob}
2882 Create and return a new cell object containing the value \var{ob}.
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002883 The parameter may be \NULL{}.
Fred Drakecd8474e2001-11-26 21:29:17 +00002884\end{cfuncdesc}
2885
2886\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyCell_Get}{PyObject *cell}
2887 Return the contents of the cell \var{cell}.
2888\end{cfuncdesc}
2889
2890\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyCell_GET}{PyObject *cell}
2891 Return the contents of the cell \var{cell}, but without checking
Raymond Hettingerf4bb1f92003-08-23 03:38:11 +00002892 that \var{cell} is non-\NULL{} and a cell object.
Fred Drakecd8474e2001-11-26 21:29:17 +00002893\end{cfuncdesc}
2894
2895\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyCell_Set}{PyObject *cell, PyObject *value}
2896 Set the contents of the cell object \var{cell} to \var{value}. This
2897 releases the reference to any current content of the cell.
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002898 \var{value} may be \NULL{}. \var{cell} must be non-\NULL{}; if it is
Fred Drakecd8474e2001-11-26 21:29:17 +00002899 not a cell object, \code{-1} will be returned. On success, \code{0}
2900 will be returned.
2901\end{cfuncdesc}
2902
2903\begin{cfuncdesc}{void}{PyCell_SET}{PyObject *cell, PyObject *value}
2904 Sets the value of the cell object \var{cell} to \var{value}. No
2905 reference counts are adjusted, and no checks are made for safety;
2906 \var{cell} must be non-\NULL{} and must be a cell object.
2907\end{cfuncdesc}
Martin v. Löwise440e472004-06-01 15:22:42 +00002908
2909
2910\subsection{Generator Objects \label{gen-objects}}
2911
2912Generator objects are what Python uses to implement generator iterators.
2913They are normally created by iterating over a function that yields values,
2914rather than explicitly calling \cfunction{PyGen_New}.
2915
2916\begin{ctypedesc}{PyGenObject}
2917 The C structure used for generator objects.
2918\end{ctypedesc}
2919
2920\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyGen_Type}
2921 The type object corresponding to generator objects
2922\end{cvardesc}
2923
2924\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyGen_Check}{ob}
2925 Return true if \var{ob} is a generator object; \var{ob} must not be
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002926 \NULL{}.
Martin v. Löwise440e472004-06-01 15:22:42 +00002927\end{cfuncdesc}
2928
2929\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyGen_CheckExact}{ob}
2930 Return true if \var{ob}'s type is \var{PyGen_Type}
2931 is a generator object; \var{ob} must not be
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002932 \NULL{}.
Martin v. Löwise440e472004-06-01 15:22:42 +00002933\end{cfuncdesc}
2934
2935\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyGen_New}{PyFrameObject *frame}
2936 Create and return a new generator object based on the \var{frame} object.
Thomas Wouters49fd7fa2006-04-21 10:40:58 +00002937 A reference to \var{frame} is stolen by this function.
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002938 The parameter must not be \NULL{}.
2939\end{cfuncdesc}
2940
2941
2942\subsection{DateTime Objects \label{datetime-objects}}
2943
2944Various date and time objects are supplied by the \module{datetime}
2945module. Before using any of these functions, the header file
2946\file{datetime.h} must be included in your source (note that this is
Thomas Wouters89f507f2006-12-13 04:49:30 +00002947not included by \file{Python.h}), and the macro
2948\cfunction{PyDateTime_IMPORT} must be invoked. The macro puts a
2949pointer to a C structure into a static variable,
2950\code{PyDateTimeAPI}, that is used by the following macros.
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002951
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00002952Type-check macros:
2953
2954\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDate_Check}{PyObject *ob}
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002955 Return true if \var{ob} is of type \cdata{PyDateTime_DateType} or
2956 a subtype of \cdata{PyDateTime_DateType}. \var{ob} must not be
2957 \NULL{}.
2958 \versionadded{2.4}
2959\end{cfuncdesc}
2960
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00002961\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDate_CheckExact}{PyObject *ob}
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002962 Return true if \var{ob} is of type \cdata{PyDateTime_DateType}.
2963 \var{ob} must not be \NULL{}.
2964 \versionadded{2.4}
2965\end{cfuncdesc}
2966
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00002967\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_Check}{PyObject *ob}
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002968 Return true if \var{ob} is of type \cdata{PyDateTime_DateTimeType} or
2969 a subtype of \cdata{PyDateTime_DateTimeType}. \var{ob} must not be
2970 \NULL{}.
2971 \versionadded{2.4}
2972\end{cfuncdesc}
2973
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00002974\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_CheckExact}{PyObject *ob}
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002975 Return true if \var{ob} is of type \cdata{PyDateTime_DateTimeType}.
2976 \var{ob} must not be \NULL{}.
2977 \versionadded{2.4}
2978\end{cfuncdesc}
2979
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00002980\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyTime_Check}{PyObject *ob}
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002981 Return true if \var{ob} is of type \cdata{PyDateTime_TimeType} or
2982 a subtype of \cdata{PyDateTime_TimeType}. \var{ob} must not be
2983 \NULL{}.
2984 \versionadded{2.4}
2985\end{cfuncdesc}
2986
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00002987\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyTime_CheckExact}{PyObject *ob}
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002988 Return true if \var{ob} is of type \cdata{PyDateTime_TimeType}.
2989 \var{ob} must not be \NULL{}.
2990 \versionadded{2.4}
2991\end{cfuncdesc}
2992
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00002993\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDelta_Check}{PyObject *ob}
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00002994 Return true if \var{ob} is of type \cdata{PyDateTime_DeltaType} or
2995 a subtype of \cdata{PyDateTime_DeltaType}. \var{ob} must not be
2996 \NULL{}.
2997 \versionadded{2.4}
2998\end{cfuncdesc}
2999
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00003000\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDelta_CheckExact}{PyObject *ob}
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00003001 Return true if \var{ob} is of type \cdata{PyDateTime_DeltaType}.
3002 \var{ob} must not be \NULL{}.
3003 \versionadded{2.4}
3004\end{cfuncdesc}
3005
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00003006\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyTZInfo_Check}{PyObject *ob}
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00003007 Return true if \var{ob} is of type \cdata{PyDateTime_TZInfoType} or
3008 a subtype of \cdata{PyDateTime_TZInfoType}. \var{ob} must not be
3009 \NULL{}.
3010 \versionadded{2.4}
3011\end{cfuncdesc}
3012
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00003013\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyTZInfo_CheckExact}{PyObject *ob}
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00003014 Return true if \var{ob} is of type \cdata{PyDateTime_TZInfoType}.
3015 \var{ob} must not be \NULL{}.
3016 \versionadded{2.4}
3017\end{cfuncdesc}
3018
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00003019Macros to create objects:
3020
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00003021\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDate_FromDate}{int year, int month, int day}
3022 Return a \code{datetime.date} object with the specified year, month
3023 and day.
3024 \versionadded{2.4}
3025\end{cfuncdesc}
3026
Brett Cannon5bbe6ad2005-02-17 05:17:17 +00003027\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDateTime_FromDateAndTime}{int year, int month,
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00003028 int day, int hour, int minute, int second, int usecond}
3029 Return a \code{datetime.datetime} object with the specified year, month,
3030 day, hour, minute, second and microsecond.
3031 \versionadded{2.4}
3032\end{cfuncdesc}
3033
3034\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyTime_FromTime}{int hour, int minute,
3035 int second, int usecond}
3036 Return a \code{datetime.time} object with the specified hour, minute,
3037 second and microsecond.
3038 \versionadded{2.4}
3039\end{cfuncdesc}
3040
3041\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDelta_FromDSU}{int days, int seconds,
3042 int useconds}
3043 Return a \code{datetime.timedelta} object representing the given number
3044 of days, seconds and microseconds. Normalization is performed so that
3045 the resulting number of microseconds and seconds lie in the ranges
3046 documented for \code{datetime.timedelta} objects.
3047 \versionadded{2.4}
3048\end{cfuncdesc}
3049
Tim Peters8ff9f9f2004-07-17 01:42:26 +00003050Macros to extract fields from date objects. The argument must be an
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00003051instance of \cdata{PyDateTime_Date}, including subclasses (such as
3052\cdata{PyDateTime_DateTime}). The argument must not be \NULL{}, and
3053the type is not checked:
3054
3055\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_GET_YEAR}{PyDateTime_Date *o}
3056 Return the year, as a positive int.
3057 \versionadded{2.4}
3058\end{cfuncdesc}
3059
3060\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_GET_MONTH}{PyDateTime_Date *o}
3061 Return the month, as an int from 1 through 12.
3062 \versionadded{2.4}
3063\end{cfuncdesc}
3064
3065\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_GET_DAY}{PyDateTime_Date *o}
3066 Return the day, as an int from 1 through 31.
3067 \versionadded{2.4}
3068\end{cfuncdesc}
3069
Tim Peters8ff9f9f2004-07-17 01:42:26 +00003070Macros to extract fields from datetime objects. The argument must be an
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00003071instance of \cdata{PyDateTime_DateTime}, including subclasses.
3072The argument must not be \NULL{}, and the type is not checked:
3073
3074\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_DATE_GET_HOUR}{PyDateTime_DateTime *o}
Neal Norwitz7fdd92f2004-08-02 21:56:33 +00003075 Return the hour, as an int from 0 through 23.
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00003076 \versionadded{2.4}
3077\end{cfuncdesc}
3078
3079\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_DATE_GET_MINUTE}{PyDateTime_DateTime *o}
3080 Return the minute, as an int from 0 through 59.
3081 \versionadded{2.4}
3082\end{cfuncdesc}
3083
3084\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_DATE_GET_SECOND}{PyDateTime_DateTime *o}
3085 Return the second, as an int from 0 through 59.
3086 \versionadded{2.4}
3087\end{cfuncdesc}
3088
3089\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_DATE_GET_MICROSECOND}{PyDateTime_DateTime *o}
3090 Return the microsecond, as an int from 0 through 999999.
3091 \versionadded{2.4}
3092\end{cfuncdesc}
3093
Tim Peters8ff9f9f2004-07-17 01:42:26 +00003094Macros to extract fields from time objects. The argument must be an
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00003095instance of \cdata{PyDateTime_Time}, including subclasses.
3096The argument must not be \NULL{}, and the type is not checked:
3097
3098\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_TIME_GET_HOUR}{PyDateTime_Time *o}
Neal Norwitz7fdd92f2004-08-02 21:56:33 +00003099 Return the hour, as an int from 0 through 23.
Tim Peters183dabc2004-07-11 19:26:19 +00003100 \versionadded{2.4}
3101\end{cfuncdesc}
3102
3103\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_TIME_GET_MINUTE}{PyDateTime_Time *o}
3104 Return the minute, as an int from 0 through 59.
3105 \versionadded{2.4}
3106\end{cfuncdesc}
3107
3108\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_TIME_GET_SECOND}{PyDateTime_Time *o}
3109 Return the second, as an int from 0 through 59.
3110 \versionadded{2.4}
3111\end{cfuncdesc}
3112
3113\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyDateTime_TIME_GET_MICROSECOND}{PyDateTime_Time *o}
3114 Return the microsecond, as an int from 0 through 999999.
3115 \versionadded{2.4}
3116\end{cfuncdesc}
3117
3118Macros for the convenience of modules implementing the DB API:
3119
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00003120\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDateTime_FromTimestamp}{PyObject *args}
3121 Create and return a new \code{datetime.datetime} object given an argument
3122 tuple suitable for passing to \code{datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp()}.
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00003123 \versionadded{2.4}
3124\end{cfuncdesc}
3125
3126\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyDate_FromTimestamp}{PyObject *args}
3127 Create and return a new \code{datetime.date} object given an argument
3128 tuple suitable for passing to \code{datetime.date.fromtimestamp()}.
Tim Peters9ddf40b2004-06-20 22:41:32 +00003129 \versionadded{2.4}
Martin v. Löwise440e472004-06-01 15:22:42 +00003130\end{cfuncdesc}
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003131
3132
3133\subsection{Set Objects \label{setObjects}}
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +00003134\sectionauthor{Raymond D. Hettinger}{python@rcn.com}
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003135
3136\obindex{set}
3137\obindex{frozenset}
3138\versionadded{2.5}
3139
3140This section details the public API for \class{set} and \class{frozenset}
3141objects. Any functionality not listed below is best accessed using the
Raymond Hettinger0c230b92005-08-17 10:05:22 +00003142either the abstract object protocol (including
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +00003143\cfunction{PyObject_CallMethod()}, \cfunction{PyObject_RichCompareBool()},
3144\cfunction{PyObject_Hash()}, \cfunction{PyObject_Repr()},
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003145\cfunction{PyObject_IsTrue()}, \cfunction{PyObject_Print()}, and
Raymond Hettinger0c230b92005-08-17 10:05:22 +00003146\cfunction{PyObject_GetIter()})
3147or the abstract number protocol (including
Thomas Wouters89f507f2006-12-13 04:49:30 +00003148\cfunction{PyNumber_And()}, \cfunction{PyNumber_Subtract()},
Raymond Hettinger0c230b92005-08-17 10:05:22 +00003149\cfunction{PyNumber_Or()}, \cfunction{PyNumber_Xor()},
Thomas Wouters89f507f2006-12-13 04:49:30 +00003150\cfunction{PyNumber_InPlaceAnd()}, \cfunction{PyNumber_InPlaceSubtract()},
Georg Brandlb518d8c2006-02-22 11:46:55 +00003151\cfunction{PyNumber_InPlaceOr()}, and \cfunction{PyNumber_InPlaceXor()}).
Thomas Wouters49fd7fa2006-04-21 10:40:58 +00003152
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003153\begin{ctypedesc}{PySetObject}
3154 This subtype of \ctype{PyObject} is used to hold the internal data for
3155 both \class{set} and \class{frozenset} objects. It is like a
3156 \ctype{PyDictObject} in that it is a fixed size for small sets
3157 (much like tuple storage) and will point to a separate, variable sized
3158 block of memory for medium and large sized sets (much like list storage).
3159 None of the fields of this structure should be considered public and
3160 are subject to change. All access should be done through the
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +00003161 documented API rather than by manipulating the values in the structure.
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003162
3163\end{ctypedesc}
3164
3165\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PySet_Type}
3166 This is an instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} representing the Python
3167 \class{set} type.
3168\end{cvardesc}
3169
3170\begin{cvardesc}{PyTypeObject}{PyFrozenSet_Type}
3171 This is an instance of \ctype{PyTypeObject} representing the Python
3172 \class{frozenset} type.
3173\end{cvardesc}
3174
3175
3176The following type check macros work on pointers to any Python object.
3177Likewise, the constructor functions work with any iterable Python object.
3178
3179\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyAnySet_Check}{PyObject *p}
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +00003180 Return true if \var{p} is a \class{set} object, a \class{frozenset}
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003181 object, or an instance of a subtype.
3182\end{cfuncdesc}
3183
3184\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyAnySet_CheckExact}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003185 Return true if \var{p} is a \class{set} object or a \class{frozenset}
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003186 object but not an instance of a subtype.
3187\end{cfuncdesc}
3188
3189\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PyFrozenSet_CheckExact}{PyObject *p}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003190 Return true if \var{p} is a \class{frozenset} object
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003191 but not an instance of a subtype.
3192\end{cfuncdesc}
3193
3194\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PySet_New}{PyObject *iterable}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003195 Return a new \class{set} containing objects returned by the
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003196 \var{iterable}. The \var{iterable} may be \NULL{} to create a
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003197 new empty set. Return the new set on success or \NULL{} on
3198 failure. Raise \exception{TypeError} if \var{iterable} is
Raymond Hettinger94fedf92005-08-17 12:23:45 +00003199 not actually iterable. The constructor is also useful for
3200 copying a set (\code{c=set(s)}).
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003201\end{cfuncdesc}
3202
3203\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PyFrozenSet_New}{PyObject *iterable}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003204 Return a new \class{frozenset} containing objects returned by the
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003205 \var{iterable}. The \var{iterable} may be \NULL{} to create a
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003206 new empty frozenset. Return the new set on success or \NULL{} on
3207 failure. Raise \exception{TypeError} if \var{iterable} is
Raymond Hettingerc47e01d2005-08-16 10:44:15 +00003208 not actually iterable.
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003209\end{cfuncdesc}
3210
3211
3212The following functions and macros are available for instances of
3213\class{set} or \class{frozenset} or instances of their subtypes.
3214
3215\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PySet_Size}{PyObject *anyset}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003216 Return the length of a \class{set} or \class{frozenset} object.
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003217 Equivalent to \samp{len(\var{anyset})}. Raises a
Raymond Hettingerc47e01d2005-08-16 10:44:15 +00003218 \exception{PyExc_SystemError} if \var{anyset} is not a \class{set},
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003219 \class{frozenset}, or an instance of a subtype.
3220 \bifuncindex{len}
3221\end{cfuncdesc}
3222
3223\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PySet_GET_SIZE}{PyObject *anyset}
3224 Macro form of \cfunction{PySet_Size()} without error checking.
3225\end{cfuncdesc}
3226
3227\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PySet_Contains}{PyObject *anyset, PyObject *key}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003228 Return 1 if found, 0 if not found, and -1 if an error is
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003229 encountered. Unlike the Python \method{__contains__()} method, this
3230 function does not automatically convert unhashable sets into temporary
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003231 frozensets. Raise a \exception{TypeError} if the \var{key} is unhashable.
3232 Raise \exception{PyExc_SystemError} if \var{anyset} is not a \class{set},
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +00003233 \class{frozenset}, or an instance of a subtype.
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003234\end{cfuncdesc}
3235
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003236The following functions are available for instances of \class{set} or
3237its subtypes but not for instances of \class{frozenset} or its subtypes.
3238
3239\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PySet_Add}{PyObject *set, PyObject *key}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003240 Add \var{key} to a \class{set} instance. Does not apply to
3241 \class{frozenset} instances. Return 0 on success or -1 on failure.
3242 Raise a \exception{TypeError} if the \var{key} is unhashable.
3243 Raise a \exception{MemoryError} if there is no room to grow.
3244 Raise a \exception{SystemError} if \var{set} is an not an instance
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003245 of \class{set} or its subtype.
3246\end{cfuncdesc}
3247
Raymond Hettingerc47e01d2005-08-16 10:44:15 +00003248\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PySet_Discard}{PyObject *set, PyObject *key}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003249 Return 1 if found and removed, 0 if not found (no action taken),
Raymond Hettingerc47e01d2005-08-16 10:44:15 +00003250 and -1 if an error is encountered. Does not raise \exception{KeyError}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003251 for missing keys. Raise a \exception{TypeError} if the \var{key} is
Raymond Hettingerc47e01d2005-08-16 10:44:15 +00003252 unhashable. Unlike the Python \method{discard()} method, this function
3253 does not automatically convert unhashable sets into temporary frozensets.
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003254 Raise \exception{PyExc_SystemError} if \var{set} is an not an instance
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +00003255 of \class{set} or its subtype.
Raymond Hettingerc47e01d2005-08-16 10:44:15 +00003256\end{cfuncdesc}
3257
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003258\begin{cfuncdesc}{PyObject*}{PySet_Pop}{PyObject *set}
Georg Brandl99363b62005-09-03 07:27:26 +00003259 Return a new reference to an arbitrary object in the \var{set},
3260 and removes the object from the \var{set}. Return \NULL{} on
3261 failure. Raise \exception{KeyError} if the set is empty.
3262 Raise a \exception{SystemError} if \var{set} is an not an instance
Thomas Wouters477c8d52006-05-27 19:21:47 +00003263 of \class{set} or its subtype.
Raymond Hettingerbeb31012005-08-16 03:47:52 +00003264\end{cfuncdesc}
3265
Thomas Wouters49fd7fa2006-04-21 10:40:58 +00003266\begin{cfuncdesc}{int}{PySet_Clear}{PyObject *set}
3267 Empty an existing set of all elements.
3268\end{cfuncdesc}