Commit Graph

186 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ivan Smirnov
6715736936 Add handle::repr() method 2016-08-14 13:43:31 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
89ec7f3e79 Add (const char *, size_t) ctors for str/bytes 2016-08-13 19:38:50 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
1e1217817b Use explicit casts in str/bytes tests 2016-08-13 18:52:39 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
35c51c477b A more strict bytes/str test 2016-08-13 13:52:27 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
245f77b4d5 Use uint64_t instead of long in numpy tests (MSVC) 2016-08-13 13:20:36 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
f36ec97827 Fix MSVC warnings in numpy example 2016-08-13 13:14:51 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
0d7a015fb4 Update numpy docstring test to the new format 2016-08-13 12:56:51 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
4611bcdd36 Fix rebasing problems in example-python-types 2016-08-13 12:55:35 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
88239ef83d Don't use unittest in tests (Python 2 compat) 2016-08-13 12:51:31 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
006d8b6621 Add casting operators between py::str / py::bytes 2016-08-13 12:51:31 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
c6257f8641 Allow nullptr in array ctors wherever possible 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
10af58fa77 Add a few more dtype tests 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
611e614619 Add tests for py::dtype ctors 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
e19980cc10 Add tests for new array/array_t ctors 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
01f7409550 Initial implementation of py::dtype 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
afb07e7e92 Code reordering / cleanup only 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
5db82353f7 Rename example20 -> example-numpy-dtypes 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
f9c0defed7 Add numpy wrappers for char[] and std::array<char> 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
f5f75c6544 Make struct packing in example20 MSVC-compliant 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
b51fa02cc3 Store array requests in local variables in tests 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
41c3399021 Update npy_format_descriptor::name() 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
8fa09cb871 Strip padding fields in dtypes, update the tests 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
5412a05cf0 Rename PYBIND11_DTYPE to PYBIND11_NUMPY_DTYPE 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
d0bafd90e0 Add a test for buffer format of unbound struct 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
5e71e17bdf Make changes to format_descriptor backwards-compat
The format strings that are known at compile time are now accessible
via both ::value and ::format(), and format strings for everything
else is accessible via ::format(). This makes it backwards compatible.
2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
4f164217e4 Add dtype_of<T>() function, update the tests 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
2a7acb6d55 Incref descriptors properly when creating arrays 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
669e14269d Add test for a function accepting recarray (WIP) 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
bdc9902041 Add explicit test for recarray format descriptors 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
7f913aecab Add tests for nested recarrays 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
8502f542b3 Add packed recarray tests 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
2e1565e414 Add empty recarray test, check for calloc fail 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
bb4015ded3 Add a basic test for recarrays and complex dtypes 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
8b5fc8b5e1 Dump test output if the test runner fails 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov
42ad328481 Change format_descriptor::value to a static func 2016-08-13 12:43:16 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander
5aa85be26e Added pybind11::make_key_iterator for map iteration
This allows exposing a dict-like interface to python code, allowing
iteration over keys via:

    for k in custommapping:
        ...

while still allowing iteration over pairs, so that you can also
implement 'dict.items()' functionality which returns a pair iterator,
allowing:

    for k, v in custommapping.items():
        ...

example-sequences-and-iterators is updated with a custom class providing
both types of iteration.
2016-08-11 21:22:05 -04:00
Wenzel Jakob
216df0dd67 quench warning on clang/OSX 2016-08-12 00:59:57 +02:00
Jason Rhinelander
3f589379ec Improve constructor/destructor tracking
This commit rewrites the examples that look for constructor/destructor
calls to do so via static variable tracking rather than output parsing.

The added ConstructorStats class provides methods to keep track of
constructors and destructors, number of default/copy/move constructors,
and number of copy/move assignments.  It also provides a mechanism for
storing values (e.g. for value construction), and then allows all of
this to be checked at the end of a test by getting the statistics for a
C++ (or python mapping) class.

By not relying on the precise pattern of constructions/destructions,
but rather simply ensuring that every construction is matched with a
destruction on the same object, we ensure that everything that gets
created also gets destroyed as expected.

This replaces all of the various "std::cout << whatever" code in
constructors/destructors with
`print_created(this)`/`print_destroyed(this)`/etc. functions which
provide similar output, but now has a unified format across the
different examples, including a new ### prefix that makes mixed example
output and lifecycle events easier to distinguish.

With this change, relaxed mode is no longer needed, which enables
testing for proper destruction under MSVC, and under any other compiler
that generates code calling extra constructors, or optimizes away any
constructors.  GCC/clang are used as the baseline for move
constructors; the tests are adapted to allow more move constructors to
be evoked (but other types are constructors much have matching counts).

This commit also disables output buffering of tests, as the buffering
sometimes results in C++ output ending up in the middle of python
output (or vice versa), depending on the OS/python version.
2016-08-11 18:16:04 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
f2ecd8927e Implement reference_internal with a keep_alive
reference_internal requires an `instance` field to track the returned
reference's parent, but that's just a duplication of what
keep_alive<0,1> does, so use a keep alive to do this to eliminate the
duplication.
2016-08-10 12:08:04 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
1b05ce5bc0 Track registered instances that share a pointer address
The pointer to the first member of a class instance is the same as the
pointer to instance itself; pybind11 has some workarounds for this to
not track registered instances that have a registered parent with the
same address.  This doesn't work everywhere, however: issue #328 is a
failure of this for a mutator operator which resolves its argument to
the parent rather than the child, as is needed in #328.

This commit resolves the issue (and restores tracking of same-address
instances) by changing registered_instances from an unordered_map to an
unordered_multimap that allows duplicate instances for the same pointer
to be recorded, then resolves these differences by checking the type of
each matched instance when looking up an instance.  (A
unordered_multimap seems cleaner for this than a unordered_map<list> or
similar because, the vast majority of the time, the instance will be
unique).
2016-08-09 17:57:59 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
ed14879a19 Move support for return values of called Python functions
Currently pybind11 always translates values returned by Python functions
invoked from C++ code by copying, even when moving is feasible--and,
more importantly, even when moving is required.

The first, and relatively minor, concern is that moving may be
considerably more efficient for some types.  The second problem,
however, is more serious: there's currently no way python code can
return a non-copyable type to C++ code.

I ran into this while trying to add a PYBIND11_OVERLOAD of a virtual
method that returns just such a type: it simply fails to compile because
this:

    overload = ...
    overload(args).template cast<ret_type>();

involves a copy: overload(args) returns an object instance, and the
invoked object::cast() loads the returned value, then returns a copy of
the loaded value.

We can, however, safely move that returned value *if* the object has the
only reference to it (i.e. if ref_count() == 1) and the object is
itself temporary (i.e. if it's an rvalue).

This commit does that by adding an rvalue-qualified object::cast()
method that allows the returned value to be move-constructed out of the
stored instance when feasible.

This basically comes down to three cases:

- For objects that are movable but not copyable, we always try the move,
  with a runtime exception raised if this would involve moving a value
  with multiple references.
- When the type is both movable and non-trivially copyable, the move
  happens only if the invoked object has a ref_count of 1, otherwise the
  object is copied.  (Trivially copyable types are excluded from this
  case because they are typically just collections of primitive types,
  which can be copied just as easily as they can be moved.)
- Non-movable and trivially copy constructible objects are simply
  copied.

This also adds examples to example-virtual-functions that shows both a
non-copyable object and a movable/copyable object in action: the former
raises an exception if returned while holding a reference, the latter
invokes a move constructor if unreferenced, or a copy constructor if
referenced.

Basically this allows code such as:

    class MyClass(Pybind11Class):
        def somemethod(self, whatever):
            mt = MovableType(whatever)
            # ...
            return mt

which allows the MovableType instance to be returned to the C++ code
via its move constructor.

Of course if you attempt to violate this by doing something like:

    self.value = MovableType(whatever)
    return self.value

you get an exception--but right now, the pybind11-side of that code
won't compile at all.
2016-08-08 13:47:37 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
d6c365bcfa virtual + inheritance example: remove multiple inheritance approach
It was already pretty badly intrusive, but it also appears to make MSVC
segfault.  Rather than investigating and fixing it, it's easier to just
remove it.
2016-08-05 18:03:06 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
0ca96e2915 Added advanced doc section on virtual methods + inheritance
As discussed in #320.

The adds a documentation block that mentions that the trampoline classes
must provide overrides for both the classes' own virtual methods *and*
any inherited virtual methods.  It also provides a templated solution to
avoiding method duplication.

The example includes a third method (only mentioned in the "see also"
section of the documentation addition), using multiple inheritance.
While this approach works, and avoids code generation in deep
hierarchies, it is intrusive by requiring that the wrapped classes use
virtual inheritance, which itself is more instrusive if any of the
virtual base classes need anything other than default constructors.  As
per the discussion in #320, it is kept as an example, but not suggested
in the documentation.
2016-08-05 18:02:37 -04:00
Dean Moldovan
ed23dda93b Adopt PEP 484 type hints for C++ types exported to Python 2016-08-04 23:47:07 +02:00
Dean Moldovan
ecced6c5ae Use generic arg names for functions without explicitly named arguments
Example signatures (old => new):
  foo(int) => foo(arg0: int)
  bar(Object, int) => bar(self: Object, arg0: int)

The change makes the signatures uniform for named and unnamed arguments
and it helps static analysis tools reconstruct function signatures from
docstrings.

This also tweaks the signature whitespace style to better conform to
PEP 8 for annotations and default arguments:
  " : " => ": "
  " = " => "="
2016-08-04 23:45:24 +02:00
Jason Rhinelander
9ffb3dda5f Eigen support for special matrix objects
Functions returning specialized Eigen matrices like Eigen::DiagonalMatrix and
Eigen::SelfAdjointView--which inherit from EigenBase but not
DenseBase--isn't currently allowed; such classes are explicitly copyable
into a Matrix (by definition), and so we can support functions that
return them by copying the value into a Matrix then casting that
resulting dense Matrix into a numpy.ndarray.  This commit does exactly
that.
2016-08-04 15:24:41 -04:00
Wenzel Jakob
19637536ac Merge pull request #315 from jagerman/eigen-stride-fix
Fix eigen copying of non-standard stride values
2016-08-04 19:47:17 +02:00
Jason Rhinelander
8657f3083a Fix eigen copying of non-standard stride values
Some Eigen objects, such as those returned by matrix.diagonal() and
matrix.block() have non-standard stride values because they are
basically just maps onto the underlying matrix without copying it (for
example, the primary diagonal of a 3x3 matrix is a vector-like object
with .src equal to the full matrix data, but with stride 4).  Returning
such an object from a pybind11 method breaks, however, because pybind11
assumes vectors have stride 1, and that matrices have strides equal to
the number of rows/columns or 1 (depending on whether the matrix is
stored column-major or row-major).

This commit fixes the issue by making pybind11 use Eigen's stride
methods when copying the data.
2016-08-04 13:21:39 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
d41a273031 Only support ==/!= int on unscoped enums
This makes the Python interface mirror the C++ interface:
pybind11-exported scoped enums aren't directly comparable to the
underlying integer values.
2016-08-04 00:21:37 -04:00
Jason Rhinelander
613541947a Fix scoped enums and add scoped enum example
PR #309 broke scoped enums, which failed to compile because the added:

    value == value2

comparison isn't valid for a scoped enum (they aren't implicitly
convertible to the underlying type).  This commit fixes it by
explicitly converting the enum value to its underlying type before
doing the comparison.

It also adds a scoped enum example to the constants-and-functions
example that triggers the problem fixed in this commit.
2016-08-04 00:01:39 -04:00