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Use stricter brace initialization
This updates the `py::init` constructors to only use brace initialization for aggregate initiailization if there is no constructor with the given arguments. This, in particular, fixes the regression in #1247 where the presence of a `std::initializer_list<T>` constructor started being invoked for constructor invocations in 2.2 even when there was a specific constructor of the desired type. The added test case demonstrates: without this change, it fails to compile because the `.def(py::init<std::vector<int>>())` constructor tries to invoke the `T(std::initializer_list<std::vector<int>>)` constructor rather than the `T(std::vector<int>)` constructor. By only using `new T{...}`-style construction when a `T(...)` constructor doesn't exist, we should bypass this by while still allowing `py::init<...>` to be used for aggregate type initialization (since such types, by definition, don't have a user-declared constructor).
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@ -52,6 +52,16 @@ bool is_alias(Cpp<Class> *ptr) {
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template <typename /*Class*/>
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constexpr bool is_alias(void *) { return false; }
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// Constructs and returns a new object; if the given arguments don't map to a constructor, we fall
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// back to brace aggregate initiailization so that for aggregate initialization can be used with
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// py::init, e.g. `py::init<int, int>` to initialize a `struct T { int a; int b; }`. For
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// non-aggregate types, we need to use an ordinary T(...) constructor (invoking as `T{...}` usually
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// works, but will not do the expected thing when `T` has an `initializer_list<T>` constructor).
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template <typename Class, typename... Args, detail::enable_if_t<std::is_constructible<Class, Args...>::value, int> = 0>
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inline Class *construct_or_initialize(Args &&...args) { return new Class(std::forward<Args>(args)...); }
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template <typename Class, typename... Args, detail::enable_if_t<!std::is_constructible<Class, Args...>::value, int> = 0>
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inline Class *construct_or_initialize(Args &&...args) { return new Class{std::forward<Args>(args)...}; }
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// Attempts to constructs an alias using a `Alias(Cpp &&)` constructor. This allows types with
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// an alias to provide only a single Cpp factory function as long as the Alias can be
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// constructed from an rvalue reference of the base Cpp type. This means that Alias classes
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@ -161,7 +171,7 @@ struct constructor {
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template <typename Class, typename... Extra, enable_if_t<!Class::has_alias, int> = 0>
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static void execute(Class &cl, const Extra&... extra) {
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cl.def("__init__", [](value_and_holder &v_h, Args... args) {
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v_h.value_ptr() = new Cpp<Class>{std::forward<Args>(args)...};
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v_h.value_ptr() = construct_or_initialize<Cpp<Class>>(std::forward<Args>(args)...);
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}, is_new_style_constructor(), extra...);
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}
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@ -171,9 +181,9 @@ struct constructor {
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static void execute(Class &cl, const Extra&... extra) {
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cl.def("__init__", [](value_and_holder &v_h, Args... args) {
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if (Py_TYPE(v_h.inst) == v_h.type->type)
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v_h.value_ptr() = new Cpp<Class>{std::forward<Args>(args)...};
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v_h.value_ptr() = construct_or_initialize<Cpp<Class>>(std::forward<Args>(args)...);
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else
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v_h.value_ptr() = new Alias<Class>{std::forward<Args>(args)...};
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v_h.value_ptr() = construct_or_initialize<Alias<Class>>(std::forward<Args>(args)...);
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}, is_new_style_constructor(), extra...);
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}
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@ -182,7 +192,7 @@ struct constructor {
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!std::is_constructible<Cpp<Class>, Args...>::value, int> = 0>
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static void execute(Class &cl, const Extra&... extra) {
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cl.def("__init__", [](value_and_holder &v_h, Args... args) {
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v_h.value_ptr() = new Alias<Class>{std::forward<Args>(args)...};
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v_h.value_ptr() = construct_or_initialize<Alias<Class>>(std::forward<Args>(args)...);
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}, is_new_style_constructor(), extra...);
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}
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};
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@ -193,7 +203,7 @@ template <typename... Args> struct alias_constructor {
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enable_if_t<Class::has_alias && std::is_constructible<Alias<Class>, Args...>::value, int> = 0>
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static void execute(Class &cl, const Extra&... extra) {
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cl.def("__init__", [](value_and_holder &v_h, Args... args) {
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v_h.value_ptr() = new Alias<Class>{std::forward<Args>(args)...};
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v_h.value_ptr() = construct_or_initialize<Alias<Class>>(std::forward<Args>(args)...);
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}, is_new_style_constructor(), extra...);
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}
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};
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@ -10,6 +10,16 @@
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#include "pybind11_tests.h"
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#include "constructor_stats.h"
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#include "local_bindings.h"
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#include <pybind11/stl.h>
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// test_brace_initialization
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struct NoBraceInitialization {
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NoBraceInitialization(std::vector<int> v) : vec{std::move(v)} {}
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template <typename T>
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NoBraceInitialization(std::initializer_list<T> l) : vec(l) {}
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std::vector<int> vec;
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};
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TEST_SUBMODULE(class_, m) {
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// test_instance
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@ -291,6 +301,12 @@ TEST_SUBMODULE(class_, m) {
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.def(py::init<int, const std::string &>())
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.def_readwrite("field1", &BraceInitialization::field1)
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.def_readwrite("field2", &BraceInitialization::field2);
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// We *don't* want to construct using braces when the given constructor argument maps to a
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// constructor, because brace initialization could go to the wrong place (in particular when
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// there is also an `initializer_list<T>`-accept constructor):
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py::class_<NoBraceInitialization>(m, "NoBraceInitialization")
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.def(py::init<std::vector<int>>())
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.def_readonly("vec", &NoBraceInitialization::vec);
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// test_reentrant_implicit_conversion_failure
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// #1035: issue with runaway reentrant implicit conversion
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@ -228,6 +228,12 @@ def test_brace_initialization():
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assert a.field1 == 123
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assert a.field2 == "test"
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# Tests that a non-simple class doesn't get brace initialization (if the
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# class defines an initializer_list constructor, in particular, it would
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# win over the expected constructor).
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b = m.NoBraceInitialization([123, 456])
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assert b.vec == [123, 456]
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@pytest.unsupported_on_pypy
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def test_class_refcount():
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