Commit Graph

148 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jason Rhinelander 11a337f16f Unicode fixes and docs (#624)
* Propagate unicode conversion failure

If returning a std::string with invalid utf-8 data, we currently fail
with an uninformative TypeError instead of propagating the
UnicodeDecodeError that Python sets on failure.

* Add support for u16/u32strings and literals

This adds support for wchar{16,32}_t character literals and the
associated std::u{16,32}string types.  It also folds the
character/string conversion into a single type_caster template, since
the type casters for string and wstring were mostly the same anyway.

* Added too-long and too-big character conversion errors

With this commit, when casting to a single character, as opposed to a
C-style string, we make sure the input wasn't a multi-character string
or a single character with codepoint too large for the character type.

This also changes the character cast op to CharT instead of CharT& (we
need to be able to return a temporary decoded char value, but also
because there's little gained by bothering with an lvalue return here).

Finally it changes the char caster to 'has-a-string-caster' instead of
'is-a-string-caster' because, with the cast_op change above, there's
nothing at all gained from inheritance.  This also lets us remove the
`success` from the string caster (which was only there for the char
caster) into the char caster itself.  (I also renamed it to 'none' and
inverted its value to better reflect its purpose).  The None -> nullptr
loading also now takes place only under a `convert = true` load pass.
Although it's unlikely that a function taking a char also has overloads
that can take a None, it seems marginally more correct to treat it as a
conversion.

This commit simplifies the size assumptions about character sizes with
static_asserts to back them up.
2017-02-14 11:08:19 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander 1bee6e7df8 Overhaul LTO flag detection
Clang on linux currently fails to run cmake:

    $ CC=clang CXX=clang++ cmake ..
    ...
    -- Configuring done
    CMake Error at tools/pybind11Tools.cmake:135 (target_compile_options):
      Error evaluating generator expression:

        $<:-flto>

      Expression did not evaluate to a known generator expression
    Call Stack (most recent call first):
      tests/CMakeLists.txt:68 (pybind11_add_module)

But investigating this led to various other -flto detection problems;
this commit thus overhauls LTO flag detection:

- -flto needs to be passed to the linker as well
- Also compile with -fno-fat-lto-objects under GCC
- Pass the equivalent flags to MSVC
- Enable LTO flags for via generator expressions (for non-debug builds
  only), so that multi-config builds (like on Windows) still work
  properly.  This seems reasonable, however, even on single-config
  builds (and simplifies the cmake code a bit).
- clang's lto linker plugins don't accept '-Os', so replace it with
  '-O3' when doing a MINSIZEREL build
- Enable trying ThinLTO by default for test suite (only affects clang)
- Match Clang$ rather than ^Clang$ because, for cmake with 3.0+
  policies in effect, the compiler ID will be AppleClang on macOS.
2017-02-14 10:59:59 +01:00
Matthew Woehlke 5e92b3e608 Fix path to libsize.py (#658)
Use PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR instead of CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR as the base of the
path to libsize.py. This fixes an error if pybind11 is being built
directly within another project.
2017-02-08 23:43:23 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander 1eaacd19f6 Fix debugging output for nameless py::arg_v annotations (#648)
* Fix debugging output for nameless py::arg annotations

This fixes a couple bugs with nameless py::arg() (introduced in #634)
annotations:

- the argument name was being used in debug mode without checking that
  it exists (which would result in the std::string construction throwing
  an exception for being invoked with a nullptr)
- the error output says "keyword arguments", but py::arg_v() can now
  also be used for positional argument defaults.
- the debugging output "in function named 'blah'" was overly verbose:
  changed it to just "in function 'blah'".

* Fix missing space in debug test string

* Moved tests from issues to methods_and_attributes
2017-02-08 08:45:51 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander e550589b42 Prefer non-converting argument overloads
This changes the function dispatching code for overloaded functions into
a two-pass procedure where we first try all overloads with
`convert=false` for all arguments.  If no function calls succeeds in the
first pass, we then try a second pass where we allow arguments to have
`convert=true` (unless, of course, the argument was explicitly specified
with `py::arg().noconvert()`).

For non-overloaded methods, the two-pass procedure is skipped (we just
make the overload-allowed call).  The second pass is also skipped if it
would result in the same thing (i.e. where all arguments are
`.noconvert()` arguments).
2017-02-03 20:47:17 -05:00
Jason Rhinelander abc29cad02 Add support for non-converting arguments
This adds support for controlling the `convert` flag of arguments
through the py::arg annotation.  This then allows arguments to be
flagged as non-converting, which the type_caster is able to use to
request different behaviour.

Currently, AFAICS `convert` is only used for type converters of regular
pybind11-registered types; all of the other core type_casters ignore it.
We can, however, repurpose it to control internal conversion of
converters like Eigen and `array`: most usefully to give callers a way
to disable the conversion that would otherwise occur when a
`Eigen::Ref<const Eigen::Matrix>` argument is passed a numpy array that
requires conversion (either because it has an incompatible stride or the
wrong dtype).

Specifying a noconvert looks like one of these:

    m.def("f1", &f, "a"_a.noconvert() = "default"); // Named, default, noconvert
    m.def("f2", &f, "a"_a.noconvert()); // Named, no default, no converting
    m.def("f3", &f, py::arg().noconvert()); // Unnamed, no default, no converting

(The last part--being able to declare a py::arg without a name--is new:
previous py::arg() only accepted named keyword arguments).

Such an non-convert argument is then passed `convert = false` by the
type caster when loading the argument.  Whether this has an effect is up
to the type caster itself, but as mentioned above, this would be
extremely helpful for the Eigen support to give a nicer way to specify
a "no-copy" mode than the custom wrapper in the current PR, and
moreover isn't an Eigen-specific hack.
2017-02-03 20:18:15 -05:00
Jason Rhinelander 0558a9a739 Add warning about binding multiple modules (#635)
Issue #633 suggests people might be tempted to copy the test scripts
self-binding code, but that's a bad idea for pretty much anything other
than a test suite with self-contained test code.

This commit adds a comment as such with a reference to the
documentation that tells people how to do it instead.
2017-02-01 10:36:29 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander 12494525cf Minor fixes (#613)
* Minor doc syntax fix

The numpy documentation had a bad :file: reference (was using double
backticks instead of single backticks).

* Changed long-outdated "example" -> "tests" wording

The ConstructorStats internal docs still had "from example import", and
the main testing cpp file still used "example" in the module
description.
2017-01-31 17:28:29 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander 2686da8350 Add support for positional args with args/kwargs
This commit rewrites the function dispatcher code to support mixing
regular arguments with py::args/py::kwargs arguments.  It also
simplifies the argument loader noticeably as it no longer has to worry
about args/kwargs: all of that is now sorted out in the dispatcher,
which now simply appends a tuple/dict if the function takes
py::args/py::kwargs, then passes all the arguments in a vector.

When the argument loader hit a py::args or py::kwargs, it doesn't do
anything special: it just calls the appropriate type_caster just like it
does for any other argument (thus removing the previous special cases
for args/kwargs).

Switching to passing arguments in a single std::vector instead of a pair
of tuples also makes things simpler, both in the dispatch and the
argument_loader: since this argument list is strictly pybind-internal
(i.e. it never goes to Python) we have no particular reason to use a
Python tuple here.

Some (intentional) restrictions:
- you may not bind a function that has args/kwargs somewhere other than
  the end (this somewhat matches Python, and keeps the dispatch code a
  little cleaner by being able to not worry about where to inject the
  args/kwargs in the argument list).
- If you specify an argument both positionally and via a keyword
  argument, you get a TypeError alerting you to this (as you do in
  Python).
2017-01-31 17:24:41 +01:00
Dean Moldovan ec009a7ca2 Improve custom holder support (#607)
* Abstract away some holder functionality (resolve #585)

Custom holder types which don't have `.get()` can select the correct
function to call by specializing `holder_traits`.

* Add support for move-only holders (fix #605)
2017-01-31 17:05:44 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander f7f5bc8e37 Numpy: better compilation errors, long double support (#619)
* Clarify PYBIND11_NUMPY_DTYPE documentation

The current documentation and example reads as though
PYBIND11_NUMPY_DTYPE is a declarative macro along the same lines as
PYBIND11_DECLARE_HOLDER_TYPE, but it isn't.  The changes the
documentation and docs example to make it clear that you need to "call"
the macro.

* Add satisfies_{all,any,none}_of<T, Preds>

`satisfies_all_of<T, Pred1, Pred2, Pred3>` is a nice legibility-enhanced
shortcut for `is_all<Pred1<T>, Pred2<T>, Pred3<T>>`.

* Give better error message for non-POD dtype attempts

If you try to use a non-POD data type, you get difficult-to-interpret
compilation errors (about ::name() not being a member of an internal
pybind11 struct, among others), for which isn't at all obvious what the
problem is.

This adds a static_assert for such cases.

It also changes the base case from an empty struct to the is_pod_struct
case by no longer using `enable_if<is_pod_struct>` but instead using a
static_assert: thus specializations avoid the base class, POD types
work, and non-POD types (and unimplemented POD types like std::array)
get a more informative static_assert failure.

* Prefix macros with PYBIND11_

numpy.h uses unprefixed macros, which seems undesirable.  This prefixes
them with PYBIND11_ to match all the other macros in numpy.h (and
elsewhere).

* Add long double support

This adds long double and std::complex<long double> support for numpy
arrays.

This allows some simplification of the code used to generate format
descriptors; the new code uses fewer macros, instead putting the code as
different templated options; the template conditions end up simpler with
this because we are now supporting all basic C++ arithmetic types (and
so can use is_arithmetic instead of is_integral + multiple
different specializations).

In addition to testing that it is indeed working in the test script, it
also adds various offset and size calculations there, which
fixes the test failures under x86 compilations.
2017-01-31 17:00:15 +01:00
Pim Schellart cc88aaecc8 Add check for matching holder_type when inheriting (#588) 2017-01-31 16:52:11 +01:00
Wenzel Jakob cd7eacc584 fix segfault in test suite due to typo (fixes #586) 2017-01-04 15:05:20 +01:00
Wenzel Jakob 0e49c02213 use a more conservative mechanism to check for pytest
On a debian jessie machine, running 'python --version --noconftest' caused
pytest to try and run the test suite with the not-yet-compiled extension
module, thus failing the test. This commit chages the pytest detection
so that it only attempts to run an import statement.
2017-01-04 08:00:17 -05:00
Wenzel Jakob 64cb699e8a disable dynamic attribute test on pypy 2016-12-26 13:54:47 +01:00
Yung-Yu Chen c40d8c617f Fix segfault when repr() with pybind11 type with metaclass (#571)
* Fixed a regression that was introduced in the PyPy patch: use ht_qualname_meta instead of ht_qualname to fix PyHeapTypeObject->ht_qualname field.

* Added a qualname/repr test that works in both Python 3.3+ and previous versions
2016-12-26 11:25:42 +01:00
Dean Moldovan 06b9397c72 Add 'check' target to run all available tests 2016-12-19 16:34:48 +01:00
Dean Moldovan 71e8a7962c Rename target from pybind11::pybind11 to pybind11::module
Makes room for an eventual pybind11::embedded target.
2016-12-19 16:34:48 +01:00
Dean Moldovan 0cbec5c96e Add new options and docs for pybind11_add_module
See the documentation for a description of the options.
2016-12-19 16:34:48 +01:00
Dean Moldovan b0f3885c95 Make sure add_subdirectory and find_package behave identically
Add a BUILD_INTERFACE and a pybind11::pybind11 alias for the interface
library to match the installed target.

Add new cmake tests for add_subdirectory and consolidates the
.cpp and .py files needed for the cmake build tests:

Before:
tests
|-- test_installed_module
|   |-- CMakeLists.txt
|   |-- main.cpp
|   \-- test.py
\-- test_installed_target
    |-- CMakeLists.txt
    |-- main.cpp
    \-- test.py

After:
tests
\-- test_cmake_build
    |-- installed_module/CMakeLists.txt
    |-- installed_target/CMakeLists.txt
    |-- subdirectory_module/CMakeLists.txt
    |-- subdirectory_target/CMakeLists.txt
    |-- main.cpp
    \-- test.py
2016-12-19 16:34:48 +01:00
Wenzel Jakob 1d1f81b278 WIP: PyPy support (#527)
This commit includes modifications that are needed to get pybind11 to work with PyPy. The full test suite compiles and runs except for a last few functions that are commented out (due to problems in PyPy that were reported on the PyPy bugtracker).

Two somewhat intrusive changes were needed to make it possible: two new tags ``py::buffer_protocol()`` and ``py::metaclass()`` must now be specified to the ``class_`` constructor if the class uses the buffer protocol and/or requires a metaclass (e.g. for static properties).

Note that this is only for the PyPy version based on Python 2.7 for now. When the PyPy 3.x has caught up in terms of cpyext compliance, a PyPy 3.x patch will follow.
2016-12-16 15:00:46 +01:00
Wenzel Jakob 2029171211 always_construct_holder feature to support intrusively reference-counted types (#561)
* always_construct_holder feature to support intrusively reference-counted types

* added testcase
2016-12-15 23:44:23 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander fa5d05e15d Change all_of_t/any_of_t to all_of/any_of, add none_of
This replaces the current `all_of_t<Pred, Ts...>` with `all_of<Ts...>`,
with previous use of `all_of_t<Pred, Ts...>` becoming
`all_of<Pred<Ts>...>` (and similarly for `any_of_t`).  It also adds a
`none_of<Ts...>`, a shortcut for `negation<any_of<Ts...>>`.

This allows `all_of` and `any_of` to be used a bit more flexible, e.g.
in cases where several predicates need to be tested for the same type
instead of the same predicate for multiple types.

This commit replaces the implementation with a more efficient version
for non-MSVC.  For MSVC, this changes the workaround to use the
built-in, recursive std::conjunction/std::disjunction instead.

This also removes the `count_t` since `any_of_t` and `all_of_t` were the
only things using it.

This commit also rearranges some of the future std imports to use actual
`std` implementations for C++14/17 features when under the appropriate
compiler mode, as we were already doing for a few things (like
index_sequence).  Most of these aren't saving much (the implementation
for enable_if_t, for example, is trivial), but I think it makes the
intention of the code instantly clear.  It also enables MSVC's native
std::index_sequence support.
2016-12-14 20:42:36 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander 6e036e78a7 Support binding noexcept function/methods in C++17
When compiling in C++17 mode the noexcept specifier is part of the
function type.  This causes a failure in pybind11 because, by omitting
a noexcept specifier when deducing function return and argument types,
we are implicitly making `noexcept(false)` part of the type.

This means that functions with `noexcept` fail to match the function
templates in cpp_function (and other places), and we get compilation
failure (we end up trying to fit it into the lambda function version,
which fails since a function pointer has no `operator()`).

We can, however, deduce the true/false `B` in noexcept(B), so we don't
need to add a whole other set of overloads, but need to deduce the extra
argument when under C++17.  That will *not* work under pre-C++17,
however.

This commit adds two macros to fix the problem: under C++17 (with the
appropriate feature macro set) they provide an extra `bool NoExceptions`
template argument and provide the `noexcept(NoExceptions)` deduced
specifier.  Under pre-C++17 they expand to nothing.

This is needed to compile pybind11 with gcc7 under -std=c++17.
2016-12-14 20:40:49 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander 79de508ef4 Fix test compilation when both optional's exist
gcc 7 has both std::experimental::optional and std::optional, but this
breaks the test compilation as we are trying to use the same `opt_int`
type alias for both.
2016-12-14 20:40:49 +01:00
Lori A. Burns eb09af5e58 test installed pybind 2016-12-13 21:44:19 +01:00
Dean Moldovan 76e993a3f4 Set maximum line length for Python style checker (#552) 2016-12-13 00:59:28 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander 3f1ff3f4d1 Adds automatic casting on assignment of non-pyobject types (#551)
This adds automatic casting when assigning to python types like dict,
list, and attributes.  Instead of:

    dict["key"] = py::cast(val);
    m.attr("foo") = py::cast(true);
    list.append(py::cast(42));

you can now simply write:

    dict["key"] = val;
    m.attr("foo") = true;
    list.append(42);

Casts needing extra parameters (e.g. for a non-default rvp) still
require the py::cast() call. set::add() is also supported.

All usage is channeled through a SFINAE implementation which either just returns or casts. 

Combined non-converting handle and autocasting template methods via a
helper method that either just returns (handle) or casts (C++ type).
2016-12-12 23:42:52 +01:00
Dean Moldovan 4e959c9af4 Add syntax sugar for resolving overloaded functions (#541) 2016-12-08 11:07:52 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander ae185b7f19 std::valarray support for stl.h (#545)
* Added ternary support with descr args

Current the `_<bool>(a, b)` ternary support only works for `char[]` `a`
and `b`; this commit allows it to work for `descr` `a` and `b` arguments
as well.

* Add support for std::valarray to stl.h

This abstracts the std::array into a `array_caster` which can then be
used with either std::array or std::valarray, the main difference being
that std::valarray is resizable.  (It also lets the array_caster be
potentially used for other std::array-like interfaces, much as the
list_caster and map_caster currently provide).

* Small stl.h cleanups

- Remove redundant `type` typedefs
- make internal list_caster methods private
2016-12-08 00:43:29 +01:00
Dean Moldovan ab90ec6ce9 Allow references to objects held by smart pointers (#533) 2016-12-07 02:36:44 +01:00
Dean Moldovan 107285b353 Accept any sequence type as std::tuple or std::pair
This is more Pythonic and compliments the std::vector and std::list
casters which also accept sequences.
2016-12-03 23:13:53 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander f200493716 Fixed stl casters to use the appropriate type_caster cast_op_type (#529)
stl casters were using a value cast to (Value) or (Key), but that isn't
always appropriate.  This changes it to use the appropriate value
converter's cast_op_type.
2016-11-25 13:06:18 +01:00
Patrick Stewart 5271576828 Use correct itemsize when constructing a numpy dtype from a buffer_info 2016-11-22 22:01:03 +01:00
patstew 47681c183d Only mark unaligned types in buffers (#505)
Previously all types are marked unaligned in buffer format strings,
now we test for alignment before adding the '=' marker.
2016-11-22 12:17:07 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander 7146d6299c Changed "Invoked with" output to use repr() instead of str() (#518)
This gives more informative output, often including the type (or at
least some hint about the type).
2016-11-22 11:28:40 +01:00
Dean Moldovan bad1740213 Add checks to maintain a consistent Python code style and prevent bugs (#515)
A flake8 configuration is included in setup.cfg and the checks are
executed automatically on Travis:

* Ensures a consistent PEP8 code style
* Does basic linting to prevent possible bugs
2016-11-20 21:21:54 +01:00
Dean Moldovan d079f41c26 Always use return_value_policy::move for rvalues (#510)
Fixes #509.

The move policy was already set for rvalues in PR #473, but this only
applied to directly cast user-defined types. The problem is that STL
containers cast values indirectly and the rvalue information is lost.
Therefore the move policy was not set correctly. This commit fixes it.

This also makes an additional adjustment to remove the `copy` policy
exception: rvalues now always use the `move` policy. This is also safe
for copy-only rvalues because the `move` policy has an internal fallback
to copying.
2016-11-20 05:31:02 +01:00
Wenzel Jakob 7c2461eefd resolve issue involving inheritance + def_static + override (fixes #511) 2016-11-20 05:26:02 +01:00
Wenzel Jakob 405f6d1dfd make arithmetic operators of enum_ optional (#508)
Following commit 90d278, the object code generated by the python
bindings of nanogui (github.com/wjakob/nanogui) went up by a whopping
12%. It turns out that that project has quite a few enums where we don't
really care about arithmetic operators.

This commit thus partially reverts the effects of #503 by introducing
an additional attribute py::arithmetic() that must be specified if the
arithmetic operators are desired.
2016-11-17 23:24:47 +01:00
Lori A. Burns 99ddc9ac1a equals needed for test_copy_move_policies to build icpc 2016.3 (#507) 2016-11-17 11:01:11 +01:00
Dean Moldovan 4de271027d Improve consistency of array and array_t with regard to other pytypes
* `array_t(const object &)` now throws on error
* `array_t::ensure()` is intended for casters —- old constructor is
  deprecated
* `array` and `array_t` get default constructors (empty array)
* `array` gets a converting constructor
* `py::isinstance<array_T<T>>()` checks the type (but not flags)

There is only one special thing which must remain: `array_t` gets
its own `type_caster` specialization which uses `ensure` instead
of a simple check.
2016-11-17 08:55:42 +01:00
Dean Moldovan e18bc02fc9 Add default and converting constructors for all concrete Python types
* Deprecate the `py::object::str()` member function since `py::str(obj)`
  is now equivalent and preferred

* Make `py::repr()` a free function

* Make sure obj.cast<T>() works as expected when T is a Python type

`obj.cast<T>()` should be the same as `T(obj)`, i.e. it should convert
the given object to a different Python type. However, `obj.cast<T>()`
usually calls `type_caster::load()` which only checks the type without
doing any actual conversion. That causes a very unexpected `cast_error`.
This commit makes it so that `obj.cast<T>()` and `T(obj)` are the same
when T is a Python type.

* Simplify pytypes converting constructor implementation

It's not necessary to maintain a full set of converting constructors
and assignment operators + const& and &&. A single converting const&
constructor will work and there is no impact on binary size. On the
other hand, the conversion functions can be significantly simplified.
2016-11-17 08:55:42 +01:00
Dean Moldovan b4498ef44d Add py::isinstance<T>(obj) for generalized Python type checking
Allows checking the Python types before creating an object instead of
after. For example:
```c++
auto l = list(ptr, true);
if (l.check())
   // ...
```
The above is replaced with:
```c++
if (isinstance<list>(ptr)) {
    auto l = reinterpret_borrow(ptr);
    // ...
}
```

This deprecates `py::object::check()`. `py::isinstance()` covers the
same use case, but it can also check for user-defined types:
```c++
class Pet { ... };
py::class_<Pet>(...);

m.def("is_pet", [](py::object obj) {
    return py::isinstance<Pet>(obj); // works as expected
});
```
2016-11-17 08:55:42 +01:00
Sylvain Corlay 5027c4f95b Switch NumPy variadic indexing to per-value arguments (#500)
* Also added unsafe version without checks
2016-11-16 17:53:37 +01:00
Pim Schellart 90d27805b9 Extended enum support (#503)
* Allow enums to be ordered
* Support binary operators
2016-11-16 17:28:11 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander 2e76daa53f Enable testing for <optional> when available (#501) 2016-11-15 22:24:26 +01:00
Ivan Smirnov 425b4970b2 Add type casters for nullopt_t, fix none refcount (#499)
* Incref returned None in std::optional type caster

* Add type casters for nullopt_t

* Add a test for nullopt_t
2016-11-15 13:00:38 +01:00
Alexander Stukowski 9a110e6da8 Provide more control over automatic generation of docstrings (#486)
Added the docstring_options class, which gives global control over the generation of docstrings and function signatures.
2016-11-15 12:38:05 +01:00
Jason Rhinelander 617fbcfc1e Fix stl_bind to support movable, non-copyable value types (#490)
This commit includes the following changes:

* Don't provide make_copy_constructor for non-copyable container

make_copy_constructor currently fails for various stl containers (e.g.
std::vector, std::unordered_map, std::deque, etc.) when the container's
value type (e.g. the "T" or the std::pair<K,T> for a map) is
non-copyable.  This adds an override that, for types that look like
containers, also requires that the value_type be copyable.

* stl_bind.h: make bind_{vector,map} work for non-copy-constructible types

Most stl_bind modifiers require copying, so if the type isn't copy
constructible, we provide a read-only interface instead.

In practice, this means that if the type is non-copyable, it will be,
for all intents and purposes, read-only from the Python side (but
currently it simply fails to compile with such a container).

It is still possible for the caller to provide an interface manually
(by defining methods on the returned class_ object), but this isn't
something stl_bind can handle because the C++ code to construct values
is going to be highly dependent on the container value_type.

* stl_bind: copy only for arithmetic value types

For non-primitive types, we may well be copying some complex type, when
returning by reference is more appropriate.  This commit returns by
internal reference for all but basic arithmetic types.

* Return by reference whenever possible

Only if we definitely can't--i.e. std::vector<bool>--because v[i]
returns something that isn't a T& do we copy; for everything else, we
return by reference.

For the map case, we can always return by reference (at least for the
default stl map/unordered_map).
2016-11-15 12:30:38 +01:00