* docs: changelog update for 2.8.1
* chore: add one more entry
* [pre-commit.ci] auto fixes from pre-commit.com hooks
for more information, see https://pre-commit.ci
Co-authored-by: pre-commit-ci[bot] <66853113+pre-commit-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
* Docs: Demonstrate non-enum internal types in example
Previously example only demonstrated internal enumeration type.
To show that it works for other internal types the same way the example was updated with an additional struct Pet::Attributes type.
* [pre-commit.ci] auto fixes from pre-commit.com hooks
for more information, see https://pre-commit.ci
Co-authored-by: pre-commit-ci[bot] <66853113+pre-commit-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
* Fix `pybind11::object::operator=` to be safe if `*this` is accessible from Python
* Add `custom_type_setup` attribute
This allows for custom modifications to the PyHeapTypeObject prior to
calling `PyType_Ready`. This may be used, for example, to define
`tp_traverse` and `tp_clear` functions.
* Add make_value_iterator (#3271)
* Add make_value_iterator
This is the counterpart to make_key_iterator, and will allow
implementing a `value` method in `bind_map` (although doing so is left
for a subsequent PR).
I made a few design changes to reduce copy-and-paste boilerplate.
Previously detail::iterator_state had a boolean template parameter to
indicate whether it was being used for make_iterator or
make_key_iterator. I replaced the boolean with a class that determines
how to dereference the iterator. This allows for a generic
implementation of `__next__`.
I also added the ValueType and Extra... parameters to the iterator_state
template args, because I think it was a bug that they were missing: if
make_iterator is called twice with different values of these, only the
first set has effect (because the state class is only registered once).
There is still a potential issue in that the *values* of the extra
arguments are latched on the first call, but since most policies are
empty classes this should be even less common.
* Add some remove_cv_t to appease clang-tidy
* Make iterator_access and friends take reference
For some reason I'd accidentally made it take a const value, which
caused some issues with third-party packages.
* Another attempt to remove remove_cv_t from iterators
Some of the return types were const (non-reference) types because of the
pecularities of decltype: `decltype((*it).first)` is the *declared* type
of the member of the pair, rather than the type of the expression. So if
the reference type of the iterator is `pair<const int, int> &`, then the
decltype is `const int`. Wrapping an extra set of parentheses to form
`decltype(((*it).first))` would instead give `const int &`.
This means that the existing make_key_iterator actually returns by value
from `__next__`, rather than by reference. Since for mapping types, keys
are always const, this probably hasn't been noticed, but it will affect
make_value_iterator if the Python code tries to mutate the returned
objects. I've changed things to use double parentheses so that
make_iterator, make_key_iterator and make_value_iterator should now all
return the reference type of the iterator. I'll still need to add a test
for that; for now I'm just checking whether I can keep Clang-Tidy happy.
* Add back some NOLINTNEXTLINE to appease Clang-Tidy
This is favoured over using remove_cv_t because in some cases a const
value return type is deliberate (particularly for Eigen).
* Add a unit test for iterator referencing
Ensure that make_iterator, make_key_iterator and make_value_iterator
return references to the container elements, rather than copies. The
test for make_key_iterator fails to compile on master, which gives me
confidence that this branch has fixed it.
* Make the iterator_access etc operator() const
I'm actually a little surprised it compiled at all given that the
operator() is called on a temporary, but I don't claim to fully
understand all the different value types in C++11.
* Attempt to work around compiler bugs
https://godbolt.org/ shows an example where ICC gets the wrong result
for a decltype used as the default for a template argument, and CI also
showed problems with PGI. This is a shot in the dark to see if it fixes
things.
* Make a test constructor explicit (Clang-Tidy)
* Fix unit test on GCC 4.8.5
It seems to require the arguments to the std::pair constructor to be
implicitly convertible to the types in the pair, rather than just
requiring is_constructible.
* Remove DOXYGEN_SHOULD_SKIP_THIS guards
Now that a complex decltype expression has been replaced by a simpler
nested type, I'm hoping Doxygen will be able to build it without issues.
* Add comment to explain iterator_state template params
* fix: regression in #3271
Co-authored-by: Bruce Merry <1963944+bmerry@users.noreply.github.com>
* Add make_value_iterator
This is the counterpart to make_key_iterator, and will allow
implementing a `value` method in `bind_map` (although doing so is left
for a subsequent PR).
I made a few design changes to reduce copy-and-paste boilerplate.
Previously detail::iterator_state had a boolean template parameter to
indicate whether it was being used for make_iterator or
make_key_iterator. I replaced the boolean with a class that determines
how to dereference the iterator. This allows for a generic
implementation of `__next__`.
I also added the ValueType and Extra... parameters to the iterator_state
template args, because I think it was a bug that they were missing: if
make_iterator is called twice with different values of these, only the
first set has effect (because the state class is only registered once).
There is still a potential issue in that the *values* of the extra
arguments are latched on the first call, but since most policies are
empty classes this should be even less common.
* Add some remove_cv_t to appease clang-tidy
* Make iterator_access and friends take reference
For some reason I'd accidentally made it take a const value, which
caused some issues with third-party packages.
* Another attempt to remove remove_cv_t from iterators
Some of the return types were const (non-reference) types because of the
pecularities of decltype: `decltype((*it).first)` is the *declared* type
of the member of the pair, rather than the type of the expression. So if
the reference type of the iterator is `pair<const int, int> &`, then the
decltype is `const int`. Wrapping an extra set of parentheses to form
`decltype(((*it).first))` would instead give `const int &`.
This means that the existing make_key_iterator actually returns by value
from `__next__`, rather than by reference. Since for mapping types, keys
are always const, this probably hasn't been noticed, but it will affect
make_value_iterator if the Python code tries to mutate the returned
objects. I've changed things to use double parentheses so that
make_iterator, make_key_iterator and make_value_iterator should now all
return the reference type of the iterator. I'll still need to add a test
for that; for now I'm just checking whether I can keep Clang-Tidy happy.
* Add back some NOLINTNEXTLINE to appease Clang-Tidy
This is favoured over using remove_cv_t because in some cases a const
value return type is deliberate (particularly for Eigen).
* Add a unit test for iterator referencing
Ensure that make_iterator, make_key_iterator and make_value_iterator
return references to the container elements, rather than copies. The
test for make_key_iterator fails to compile on master, which gives me
confidence that this branch has fixed it.
* Make the iterator_access etc operator() const
I'm actually a little surprised it compiled at all given that the
operator() is called on a temporary, but I don't claim to fully
understand all the different value types in C++11.
* Attempt to work around compiler bugs
https://godbolt.org/ shows an example where ICC gets the wrong result
for a decltype used as the default for a template argument, and CI also
showed problems with PGI. This is a shot in the dark to see if it fixes
things.
* Make a test constructor explicit (Clang-Tidy)
* Fix unit test on GCC 4.8.5
It seems to require the arguments to the std::pair constructor to be
implicitly convertible to the types in the pair, rather than just
requiring is_constructible.
* Remove DOXYGEN_SHOULD_SKIP_THIS guards
Now that a complex decltype expression has been replaced by a simpler
nested type, I'm hoping Doxygen will be able to build it without issues.
* Add comment to explain iterator_state template params
* Add py::raise_from to enable chaining exceptions on Python 3.3+
* Use 'raise from' in initialization
* Documenting the exact base version of _PyErr_FormatVFromCause, adding back `assert`s.
Co-authored-by: Dustin Spicuzza <dustin@virtualroadside.com>
* Apply isort
* Tweak isort config
* Add env.py as a known_first_party
* Add one missing known first party
* Make config compat with older isort versions
* Add another comment
* Revert pyproject setting
* Create a module_internals struct
Since we now have two things that are going to be module local, it felt
correct to add a struct to manage them.
* Add local exception translators
These are added via the register_local_exception_translator function
and are then applied before the global translators
* Add unit tests to show the local exception translator works
* Fix a bug in the unit test with the string value of KeyError
* Fix a formatting issue
* Rename registered_local_types_cpp()
Rename it to get_registered_local_types_cpp() to disambiguate from the
new member of module_internals
* Add additional comments to new local exception code path
* Add a register_local_exception function
* Add additional unit tests for register_local_exception
* Use get_local_internals like get_internals
* Update documentation for new local exception feature
* Add back a missing space
* Clean-up some issues in the docs
* Remove the code duplication when translating exceptions
Separated out the exception processing into a standalone function in the
details namespace.
Clean-up some comments as per PR notes as well
* Remove the code duplication in register_exception
* Cleanup some formatting things caught by clang-format
* Remove the templates from exception translators
But I added a using declaration to alias the type.
* Remove the extra local from local_internals variable names
* Add an extra explanatory comment to local_internals
* Fix a typo in the code
For single-file extensions, a convenient pattern offered by cython
is to place the source files directly in the python source tree
(`foo/__init__.py`, `foo/ext.pyx`), deriving the package names from
their filesystem location. Adapt this pattern for pybind11, using an
`intree_extensions` helper, which should be thought of as the moral
equivalent to `cythonize`.
Differences with cythonize: I chose not to include globbing support
(`intree_extensions(glob.glob("**/*.cpp"))` seems sufficient), nor to
provide extension-customization kwargs (directly setting the attributes
on the resulting Pybind11Extension objects seems sufficient).
We could choose to have `intree_extension` (singular instead) and make
users write `[*map(intree_extension, glob.glob("**/*.cpp"))]`; no strong
opinion here.
Co-authored-by: Aaron Gokaslan <skylion.aaron@gmail.com>
* Adding test_return_vector_bool_raw_ptr to test_stl.py.
* First attempt to make the documentation more accurate, but not trying to be comprehensive, to not bloat the reference table with too many details.
* Fixing minor oversights.
* Applying reviewer suggestion.
* Adding iostream.h thread-safety documentation.
* Restoring `TestThread` code with added `std::lock_guard<std::mutex>`.
* Updating new comments to reflect new information.
* Fixing up `git rebase -X theirs` accidents.
* docs: mention PYTHONPATH in installing.rst
When pybind11 is included as a submodule, the user needs to update their
Python module search path. Otherwise, the first c++ compilation command
in docs/basics.rst will fail.
* docs: add a note about compiling the example
This note shows how to modify the compilation command for the example
when the pybind11 source has been included as a Git submodule.
* docs: add a note about compiling the example
Added an internal link to the docs
* docs: updated a note about compiling the example
Also updated the command substitution syntax for consistency
`git submodule add` needs the branch before the repository or else it is ignored. The previous code checked out the `master` branch, not the `stable` branch.
* feat: lazy compile
* refactor: lazy -> only_changed
* refactor: leave the changed function up to the user
* refactor: pass a function, based on @YannickJadoul and @HDembinski's suggestions
* refactor: old -> _old, as it's not intended for users
* docs: slight improvmenent from @rwgk
* docs: Ccache spelling, extra warning about pip caching
Ccache spelling noted by @YannickJadoul
* demo kwarg with none(false)
* Reorder and extend tests for arg::none(false) in test_methods_and_attributes.py::test_accepts_none
* Fix arg::none() for keyword arguments
* Add changelog note
* Fix names of no_none_kw test functions
Co-authored-by: Yannick Jadoul <yannick.jadoul@belgacom.net>
* Deprecated public constructors of module
* Turn documentation comment of module_::add_object into valid doxygen documentation
* Move definition of PYBIND11_DETAIL_MODULE_STATIC_DEF and PYBIND11_DETAIL_MODULE_CREATE macros up
* Move detail::create_top_level_module to module_::create_extension_module, and unify Python 2 and 3 signature again
* Throw error_already_set if module creation fails in module_::create_extension_module
* Mention module_::create_extension_module in deprecation warning message of module_::module_
* fix: PYBIND11_OBJECT could only be used inside the pybind11 namespace (regression)
* docs: add changelog for conversion protection change
* ci: update to Python 3.9
* Remove code inside 'PYPY_VERSION_NUM < 0x06000000' preprocessor if branch
* fix: more cleanup
* Remove more references to PyPy 5.7 and 5.9 in the docs
* Update comment on PyUnicode_UTF* in PyPy
Co-authored-by: Henry Schreiner <henryschreineriii@gmail.com>
* Allow function/functor passed to py::vectorize to return void
* Stealing @sizmailov's test and fixing unused argument warning
* Add missing std::move()
RVO doesn't work here because function return type is different from
actual returned type
* remove extra EOL
* docs: add a few details
* chore: pre-commit autoupdate
* Remove array_iterator, array_begin, and array_end (in detail namespace)
Co-authored-by: Sergei Izmailov <sergei.a.izmailov@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Henry Schreiner <henryschreineriii@gmail.com>
Support C++20. For backwards compatibility, we provide an alias for the old name.
This change is necessary to easily avoid errors when a compiler thinks
`module` is used as a keyword.
* feat: setup.py redesign and helpers
* refactor: simpler design with two outputs
* refactor: helper file update and Windows support
* fix: review points from @YannickJadoul
* refactor: fixes to naming and more docs
* feat: more customization points
* feat: add entry point pybind11-config
* refactor: Try Extension-focused method
* refactor: rename alt/inplace to global
* fix: allow usage with git modules, better docs
* feat: global as an extra (@YannickJadoul's suggestion)
* feat: single version location
* fix: remove the requirement that setuptools must be imported first
* fix: some review points from @wjacob
* fix: use .in, add procedure to docs
* refactor: avoid monkeypatch copy
* docs: minor typos corrected
* fix: minor points from @YannickJadoul
* fix: typo on Windows C++ mode
* fix: MSVC 15 update 3+ have c++14 flag
See <https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/std-specify-language-standard-version?view=vs-2019>
* docs: discuss making SDists by hand
* ci: use pep517.build instead of manual setup.py
* refactor: more comments from @YannickJadoul
* docs: updates from @ktbarrett
* fix: change to newly recommended tool instead of pep517.build
This was intended as a proof of concept; build seems to be the correct replacement.
See https://github.com/pypa/pep517/pull/83
* docs: updates from @wjakob
* refactor: dual version locations
* docs: typo spotted by @wjakob
* Change base parameter type in register_exception and excepion constructor from PyObject* to handle
* Fix compilation error passing `handle` to `PyObject*`
* Wrap PYBIND11_OVERLOAD_NAME and PYBIND11_OVERLOAD_PURE_NAME in do { ... } while (false), and resolve trailing semicolon
* Deprecate PYBIND11_OVERLOAD_* and get_overload in favor of PYBIND11_OVERRIDE_* and get_override
* Correct erroneous usage of 'overload' instead of 'override' in the implementation and internals
* Fix tests to use non-deprecated PYBIND11_OVERRIDE_* macros
* Update docs to use override instead of overload where appropriate, and add warning about deprecated aliases
* Add semicolons to deprecated PYBIND11_OVERLOAD macros to match original behavior
* Remove deprecation of PYBIND11_OVERLOAD_* macros and get_overload
* Add note to changelog and upgrade guide
* feat: type<T>()
* refactor: using py::type as class
* refactor: py::object as base
* wip: tigher api
* refactor: fix conversion and limit API further
* docs: some added notes from @EricCousineau-TRI
* refactor: use py::type::of
* Added guards to the includes
Added new CI config
Added new trigger
Changed CI workflow name
Debug CI
Debug CI
Debug CI
Debug CI
Added flags fro PGI
Disable Eigen
Removed tests that fail
Uncomment lines
* fix: missing include
fix: minor style cleanup
tests: support skipping
ci: remove and tighten a bit
fix: try msvc workaround for pgic
* tests: split up prealoc tests
* fix: PGI compiler fix
* fix: PGI void_t only
* fix: try to appease nvcc
* ci: better ordering for slow tests
* ci: minor improvements to testing
* ci: Add NumPy to testing
* ci: Eigen generates CUDA warnings / PGI errors
* Added CentOS7 back for a moment
* Fix YAML
* ci: runs-on missing
* centos7 is missing pytest
* ci: use C++11 on CentOS 7
* ci: test something else
* Try just adding flags on CentOS 7
* fix: CentOS 7
* refactor: move include to shared location
* Added verbose flag
* Try to use system cmake3 on CI
* Try to use system cmake3 on CI, attempt2
* Try to use system cmake3 on CI, attempt3
* tests: not finding pytest should be a warning, not a fatal error
* tests: cleanup
* Weird issue?
* fix: final polish
Co-authored-by: Andrii Verbytskyi <andrii.verbytskyi@mpp.mpg.de>
Co-authored-by: Henry Schreiner <henryschreineriii@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrii Verbytskyi <averbyts@cern.ch>
* Add py::object casting example to embedding docs
* Move implicit cast example to object.rst
* Move to bottom and improve implicit casting text
* Fix xref
* Improve wording as per @bstaletic's suggestion
* Add note that VS2017 requires /permissive- to build in C++17 mode
* ci: test C++17 on MSVC 2017
* ci: args1/2, use args to override max cxx
Co-authored-by: Henry Schreiner <henryschreineriii@gmail.com>
The main change is to treat error_already_set as a separate category
of exception that arises in different circumstances and needs to be
handled differently. The asymmetry between Python and C++ exceptions
is further emphasized.
To deal with exceptions that hit destructors or other noexcept functions.
Includes fixes to support Python 2.7 and extends documentation on
error handling.
@virtuald and @YannickJadoul both contributed to this PR.
* Fix undefined memoryview format
* Add missing <algorithm> header
* Add workaround for py27 array compatibility
* Workaround py27 memoryview behavior
* Fix memoryview constructor from buffer_info
* Workaround PyMemoryView_FromMemory availability in py27
* Fix up memoryview tests
* Update memoryview test from buffer to check signedness
* Use static factory method to create memoryview
* Remove ndim arg from memoryview::frombuffer and add tests
* Allow ndim=0 memoryview and documentation fixup
* Use void* to align to frombuffer method signature
* Add const variants of frombuffer and frommemory
* Add memory view section in doc
* Fix docs
* Add test for null buffer
* Workaround py27 nullptr behavior in test
* Rename frombuffer to from_buffer
This adds support for a `py::args_kw_only()` annotation that can be
specified between `py::arg` annotations to indicate that any following
arguments are keyword-only. This allows you to write:
m.def("f", [](int a, int b) { /* ... */ },
py::arg("a"), py::args_kw_only(), py::arg("b"));
and have it work like Python 3's:
def f(a, *, b):
# ...
with respect to how `a` and `b` arguments are accepted (that is, `a` can
be positional or by keyword; `b` can only be specified by keyword).