| .. _reference: |
| |
| .. warning:: |
| |
| Please be advised that the reference documentation discussing pybind11 |
| internals is currently incomplete. Please refer to the previous sections |
| and the pybind11 header files for the nitty gritty details. |
| |
| Reference |
| ######### |
| |
| Macros |
| ====== |
| |
| .. function:: PYBIND11_PLUGIN(const char *name) |
| |
| This macro creates the entry point that will be invoked when the Python |
| interpreter imports a plugin library. Please create a |
| :class:`module` in the function body and return the pointer to its |
| underlying Python object at the end. |
| |
| .. code-block:: cpp |
| |
| PYBIND11_PLUGIN(example) { |
| pybind11::module m("example", "pybind11 example plugin"); |
| /// Set up bindings here |
| return m.ptr(); |
| } |
| |
| .. _core_types: |
| |
| Convenience classes for arbitrary Python types |
| ============================================== |
| |
| Without reference counting |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| .. class:: handle |
| |
| The :class:`handle` class is a thin wrapper around an arbitrary Python |
| object (i.e. a ``PyObject *`` in Python's C API). It does not perform any |
| automatic reference counting and merely provides a basic C++ interface to |
| various Python API functions. |
| |
| .. seealso:: |
| |
| The :class:`object` class inherits from :class:`handle` and adds automatic |
| reference counting features. |
| |
| .. function:: handle::handle() |
| |
| The default constructor creates a handle with a ``nullptr``-valued pointer. |
| |
| .. function:: handle::handle(const handle&) |
| |
| Copy constructor |
| |
| .. function:: handle::handle(PyObject *) |
| |
| Creates a :class:`handle` from the given raw Python object pointer. |
| |
| .. function:: PyObject * handle::ptr() const |
| |
| Return the ``PyObject *`` underlying a :class:`handle`. |
| |
| .. function:: const handle& handle::inc_ref() const |
| |
| Manually increase the reference count of the Python object. Usually, it is |
| preferable to use the :class:`object` class which derives from |
| :class:`handle` and calls this function automatically. Returns a reference |
| to itself. |
| |
| .. function:: const handle& handle::dec_ref() const |
| |
| Manually decrease the reference count of the Python object. Usually, it is |
| preferable to use the :class:`object` class which derives from |
| :class:`handle` and calls this function automatically. Returns a reference |
| to itself. |
| |
| .. function:: void handle::ref_count() const |
| |
| Return the object's current reference count |
| |
| .. function:: handle handle::get_type() const |
| |
| Return a handle to the Python type object underlying the instance |
| |
| .. function detail::accessor handle::operator[](handle key) const |
| |
| Return an internal functor to invoke the object's sequence protocol. |
| Casting the returned ``detail::accessor`` instance to a :class:`handle` or |
| :class:`object` subclass causes a corresponding call to ``__getitem__``. |
| Assigning a :class:`handle` or :class:`object` subclass causes a call to |
| ``__setitem__``. |
| |
| .. function detail::accessor handle::operator[](const char *key) const |
| |
| See the above function (the only difference is that they key is provided as |
| a string literal). |
| |
| .. function detail::accessor handle::attr(handle key) const |
| |
| Return an internal functor to access the object's attributes. |
| Casting the returned ``detail::accessor`` instance to a :class:`handle` or |
| :class:`object` subclass causes a corresponding call to ``__getattr``. |
| Assigning a :class:`handle` or :class:`object` subclass causes a call to |
| ``__setattr``. |
| |
| .. function detail::accessor handle::attr(const char *key) const |
| |
| See the above function (the only difference is that they key is provided as |
| a string literal). |
| |
| .. function operator handle::bool() const |
| |
| Return ``true`` when the :class:`handle` wraps a valid Python object. |
| |
| .. function str handle::str() const |
| |
| Return a string representation of the object. This is analogous to |
| the ``str()`` function in Python. |
| |
| .. function:: template <typename T> T handle::cast() const |
| |
| Attempt to cast the Python object into the given C++ type. A |
| :class:`cast_error` will be throw upon failure. |
| |
| .. function:: template <typename ... Args> object handle::call(Args&&... args) const |
| |
| Assuming the Python object is a function or implements the ``__call__`` |
| protocol, ``call()`` invokes the underlying function, passing an arbitrary |
| set of parameters. The result is returned as a :class:`object` and may need |
| to be converted back into a Python object using :func:`handle::cast`. |
| |
| When some of the arguments cannot be converted to Python objects, the |
| function will throw a :class:`cast_error` exception. When the Python |
| function call fails, a :class:`error_already_set` exception is thrown. |
| |
| With reference counting |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| .. class:: object : public handle |
| |
| Like :class:`handle`, the object class is a thin wrapper around an |
| arbitrary Python object (i.e. a ``PyObject *`` in Python's C API). In |
| contrast to :class:`handle`, it optionally increases the object's reference |
| count upon construction, and it *always* decreases the reference count when |
| the :class:`object` instance goes out of scope and is destructed. When |
| using :class:`object` instances consistently, it is much easier to get |
| reference counting right at the first attempt. |
| |
| .. function:: object::object(const object &o) |
| |
| Copy constructor; always increases the reference count |
| |
| .. function:: object::object(const handle &h, bool borrowed) |
| |
| Creates a :class:`object` from the given :class:`handle`. The reference |
| count is only increased if the ``borrowed`` parameter is set to ``true``. |
| |
| .. function:: object::object(PyObject *ptr, bool borrowed) |
| |
| Creates a :class:`object` from the given raw Python object pointer. The |
| reference count is only increased if the ``borrowed`` parameter is set to |
| ``true``. |
| |
| .. function:: object::object(object &&other) |
| |
| Move constructor; steals the object from ``other`` and preserves its |
| reference count. |
| |
| .. function:: handle object::release() |
| |
| Resets the internal pointer to ``nullptr`` without without decreasing the |
| object's reference count. The function returns a raw handle to the original |
| Python object. |
| |
| .. function:: object::~object() |
| |
| Destructor, which automatically calls :func:`handle::dec_ref()`. |
| |
| Convenience classes for specific Python types |
| ============================================= |
| |
| |
| .. class:: module : public object |
| |
| .. function:: module::module(const char *name, const char *doc = nullptr) |
| |
| Create a new top-level Python module with the given name and docstring |
| |
| .. function:: module module::def_submodule(const char *name, const char *doc = nullptr) |
| |
| Create and return a new Python submodule with the given name and docstring. |
| This also works recursively, i.e. |
| |
| .. code-block:: cpp |
| |
| pybind11::module m("example", "pybind11 example plugin"); |
| pybind11::module m2 = m.def_submodule("sub", "A submodule of 'example'"); |
| pybind11::module m3 = m2.def_submodule("subsub", "A submodule of 'example.sub'"); |
| |
| .. cpp:function:: template <typename Func, typename ... Extra> module& module::def(const char *name, Func && f, Extra && ... extra) |
| |
| Create Python binding for a new function within the module scope. ``Func`` |
| can be a plain C++ function, a function pointer, or a lambda function. For |
| details on the ``Extra&& ... extra`` argument, see section :ref:`extras`. |
| |
| .. _extras: |
| |
| Passing extra arguments to the def function |
| =========================================== |
| |
| .. class:: arg |
| |
| .. function:: arg::arg(const char *name) |
| |
| .. function:: template <typename T> arg_t<T> arg::operator=(const T &value) |
| |
| .. class:: template <typename T> arg_t<T> : public arg |
| |
| Represents a named argument with a default value |
| |
| .. class:: sibling |
| |
| Used to specify a handle to an existing sibling function; used internally |
| to implement function overloading in :func:`module::def` and |
| :func:`class_::def`. |
| |
| .. function:: sibling::sibling(handle handle) |
| |
| .. class doc |
| |
| This is class is internally used by pybind11. |
| |
| .. function:: doc::doc(const char *value) |
| |
| Create a new docstring with the specified value |
| |
| .. class name |
| |
| This is class is internally used by pybind11. |
| |
| .. function:: name::name(const char *value) |
| |
| Used to specify the function name |