pybind11/tests/test_sequences_and_iterators.cpp
Jason Rhinelander 391c75447d Update all remaining tests to new test styles
This udpates all the remaining tests to the new test suite code and
comment styles started in #898.  For the most part, the test coverage
here is unchanged, with a few minor exceptions as noted below.

- test_constants_and_functions: this adds more overload tests with
  overloads with different number of arguments for more comprehensive
  overload_cast testing.  The test style conversion broke the overload
  tests under MSVC 2015, prompting the additional tests while looking
  for a workaround.

- test_eigen: this dropped the unused functions `get_cm_corners` and
  `get_cm_corners_const`--these same tests were duplicates of the same
  things provided (and used) via ReturnTester methods.

- test_opaque_types: this test had a hidden dependence on ExampleMandA
  which is now fixed by using the global UserType which suffices for the
  relevant test.

- test_methods_and_attributes: this required some additions to UserType
  to make it usable as a replacement for the test's previous SimpleType:
  UserType gained a value mutator, and the `value` property is not
  mutable (it was previously readonly).  Some overload tests were also
  added to better test overload_cast (as described above).

- test_numpy_array: removed the untemplated mutate_data/mutate_data_t:
  the templated versions with an empty parameter pack expand to the same
  thing.

- test_stl: this was already mostly in the new style; this just tweaks
  things a bit, localizing a class, and adding some missing
  `// test_whatever` comments.

- test_virtual_functions: like `test_stl`, this was mostly in the new
  test style already, but needed some `// test_whatever` comments.
  This commit also moves the inherited virtual example code to the end
  of the file, after the main set of tests (since it is less important
  than the other tests, and rather length); it also got renamed to
  `test_inherited_virtuals` (from `test_inheriting_repeat`) because it
  tests both inherited virtual approaches, not just the repeat approach.
2017-08-05 18:46:22 -04:00

335 lines
12 KiB
C++

/*
tests/test_sequences_and_iterators.cpp -- supporting Pythons' sequence protocol, iterators,
etc.
Copyright (c) 2016 Wenzel Jakob <wenzel.jakob@epfl.ch>
All rights reserved. Use of this source code is governed by a
BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
*/
#include "pybind11_tests.h"
#include "constructor_stats.h"
#include <pybind11/operators.h>
#include <pybind11/stl.h>
template<typename T>
class NonZeroIterator {
const T* ptr_;
public:
NonZeroIterator(const T* ptr) : ptr_(ptr) {}
const T& operator*() const { return *ptr_; }
NonZeroIterator& operator++() { ++ptr_; return *this; }
};
class NonZeroSentinel {};
template<typename A, typename B>
bool operator==(const NonZeroIterator<std::pair<A, B>>& it, const NonZeroSentinel&) {
return !(*it).first || !(*it).second;
}
template <typename PythonType>
py::list test_random_access_iterator(PythonType x) {
if (x.size() < 5)
throw py::value_error("Please provide at least 5 elements for testing.");
auto checks = py::list();
auto assert_equal = [&checks](py::handle a, py::handle b) {
auto result = PyObject_RichCompareBool(a.ptr(), b.ptr(), Py_EQ);
if (result == -1) { throw py::error_already_set(); }
checks.append(result != 0);
};
auto it = x.begin();
assert_equal(x[0], *it);
assert_equal(x[0], it[0]);
assert_equal(x[1], it[1]);
assert_equal(x[1], *(++it));
assert_equal(x[1], *(it++));
assert_equal(x[2], *it);
assert_equal(x[3], *(it += 1));
assert_equal(x[2], *(--it));
assert_equal(x[2], *(it--));
assert_equal(x[1], *it);
assert_equal(x[0], *(it -= 1));
assert_equal(it->attr("real"), x[0].attr("real"));
assert_equal((it + 1)->attr("real"), x[1].attr("real"));
assert_equal(x[1], *(it + 1));
assert_equal(x[1], *(1 + it));
it += 3;
assert_equal(x[1], *(it - 2));
checks.append(static_cast<std::size_t>(x.end() - x.begin()) == x.size());
checks.append((x.begin() + static_cast<std::ptrdiff_t>(x.size())) == x.end());
checks.append(x.begin() < x.end());
return checks;
}
TEST_SUBMODULE(sequences_and_iterators, m) {
// test_sequence
class Sequence {
public:
Sequence(size_t size) : m_size(size) {
print_created(this, "of size", m_size);
m_data = new float[size];
memset(m_data, 0, sizeof(float) * size);
}
Sequence(const std::vector<float> &value) : m_size(value.size()) {
print_created(this, "of size", m_size, "from std::vector");
m_data = new float[m_size];
memcpy(m_data, &value[0], sizeof(float) * m_size);
}
Sequence(const Sequence &s) : m_size(s.m_size) {
print_copy_created(this);
m_data = new float[m_size];
memcpy(m_data, s.m_data, sizeof(float)*m_size);
}
Sequence(Sequence &&s) : m_size(s.m_size), m_data(s.m_data) {
print_move_created(this);
s.m_size = 0;
s.m_data = nullptr;
}
~Sequence() { print_destroyed(this); delete[] m_data; }
Sequence &operator=(const Sequence &s) {
if (&s != this) {
delete[] m_data;
m_size = s.m_size;
m_data = new float[m_size];
memcpy(m_data, s.m_data, sizeof(float)*m_size);
}
print_copy_assigned(this);
return *this;
}
Sequence &operator=(Sequence &&s) {
if (&s != this) {
delete[] m_data;
m_size = s.m_size;
m_data = s.m_data;
s.m_size = 0;
s.m_data = nullptr;
}
print_move_assigned(this);
return *this;
}
bool operator==(const Sequence &s) const {
if (m_size != s.size()) return false;
for (size_t i = 0; i < m_size; ++i)
if (m_data[i] != s[i])
return false;
return true;
}
bool operator!=(const Sequence &s) const { return !operator==(s); }
float operator[](size_t index) const { return m_data[index]; }
float &operator[](size_t index) { return m_data[index]; }
bool contains(float v) const {
for (size_t i = 0; i < m_size; ++i)
if (v == m_data[i])
return true;
return false;
}
Sequence reversed() const {
Sequence result(m_size);
for (size_t i = 0; i < m_size; ++i)
result[m_size - i - 1] = m_data[i];
return result;
}
size_t size() const { return m_size; }
const float *begin() const { return m_data; }
const float *end() const { return m_data+m_size; }
private:
size_t m_size;
float *m_data;
};
py::class_<Sequence>(m, "Sequence")
.def(py::init<size_t>())
.def(py::init<const std::vector<float>&>())
/// Bare bones interface
.def("__getitem__", [](const Sequence &s, size_t i) {
if (i >= s.size()) throw py::index_error();
return s[i];
})
.def("__setitem__", [](Sequence &s, size_t i, float v) {
if (i >= s.size()) throw py::index_error();
s[i] = v;
})
.def("__len__", &Sequence::size)
/// Optional sequence protocol operations
.def("__iter__", [](const Sequence &s) { return py::make_iterator(s.begin(), s.end()); },
py::keep_alive<0, 1>() /* Essential: keep object alive while iterator exists */)
.def("__contains__", [](const Sequence &s, float v) { return s.contains(v); })
.def("__reversed__", [](const Sequence &s) -> Sequence { return s.reversed(); })
/// Slicing protocol (optional)
.def("__getitem__", [](const Sequence &s, py::slice slice) -> Sequence* {
size_t start, stop, step, slicelength;
if (!slice.compute(s.size(), &start, &stop, &step, &slicelength))
throw py::error_already_set();
Sequence *seq = new Sequence(slicelength);
for (size_t i = 0; i < slicelength; ++i) {
(*seq)[i] = s[start]; start += step;
}
return seq;
})
.def("__setitem__", [](Sequence &s, py::slice slice, const Sequence &value) {
size_t start, stop, step, slicelength;
if (!slice.compute(s.size(), &start, &stop, &step, &slicelength))
throw py::error_already_set();
if (slicelength != value.size())
throw std::runtime_error("Left and right hand size of slice assignment have different sizes!");
for (size_t i = 0; i < slicelength; ++i) {
s[start] = value[i]; start += step;
}
})
/// Comparisons
.def(py::self == py::self)
.def(py::self != py::self)
// Could also define py::self + py::self for concatenation, etc.
;
// test_map_iterator
// Interface of a map-like object that isn't (directly) an unordered_map, but provides some basic
// map-like functionality.
class StringMap {
public:
StringMap() = default;
StringMap(std::unordered_map<std::string, std::string> init)
: map(std::move(init)) {}
void set(std::string key, std::string val) { map[key] = val; }
std::string get(std::string key) const { return map.at(key); }
size_t size() const { return map.size(); }
private:
std::unordered_map<std::string, std::string> map;
public:
decltype(map.cbegin()) begin() const { return map.cbegin(); }
decltype(map.cend()) end() const { return map.cend(); }
};
py::class_<StringMap>(m, "StringMap")
.def(py::init<>())
.def(py::init<std::unordered_map<std::string, std::string>>())
.def("__getitem__", [](const StringMap &map, std::string key) {
try { return map.get(key); }
catch (const std::out_of_range&) {
throw py::key_error("key '" + key + "' does not exist");
}
})
.def("__setitem__", &StringMap::set)
.def("__len__", &StringMap::size)
.def("__iter__", [](const StringMap &map) { return py::make_key_iterator(map.begin(), map.end()); },
py::keep_alive<0, 1>())
.def("items", [](const StringMap &map) { return py::make_iterator(map.begin(), map.end()); },
py::keep_alive<0, 1>())
;
// test_generalized_iterators
class IntPairs {
public:
IntPairs(std::vector<std::pair<int, int>> data) : data_(std::move(data)) {}
const std::pair<int, int>* begin() const { return data_.data(); }
private:
std::vector<std::pair<int, int>> data_;
};
py::class_<IntPairs>(m, "IntPairs")
.def(py::init<std::vector<std::pair<int, int>>>())
.def("nonzero", [](const IntPairs& s) {
return py::make_iterator(NonZeroIterator<std::pair<int, int>>(s.begin()), NonZeroSentinel());
}, py::keep_alive<0, 1>())
.def("nonzero_keys", [](const IntPairs& s) {
return py::make_key_iterator(NonZeroIterator<std::pair<int, int>>(s.begin()), NonZeroSentinel());
}, py::keep_alive<0, 1>())
;
#if 0
// Obsolete: special data structure for exposing custom iterator types to python
// kept here for illustrative purposes because there might be some use cases which
// are not covered by the much simpler py::make_iterator
struct PySequenceIterator {
PySequenceIterator(const Sequence &seq, py::object ref) : seq(seq), ref(ref) { }
float next() {
if (index == seq.size())
throw py::stop_iteration();
return seq[index++];
}
const Sequence &seq;
py::object ref; // keep a reference
size_t index = 0;
};
py::class_<PySequenceIterator>(seq, "Iterator")
.def("__iter__", [](PySequenceIterator &it) -> PySequenceIterator& { return it; })
.def("__next__", &PySequenceIterator::next);
On the actual Sequence object, the iterator would be constructed as follows:
.def("__iter__", [](py::object s) { return PySequenceIterator(s.cast<const Sequence &>(), s); })
#endif
// test_python_iterator_in_cpp
m.def("object_to_list", [](py::object o) {
auto l = py::list();
for (auto item : o) {
l.append(item);
}
return l;
});
m.def("iterator_to_list", [](py::iterator it) {
auto l = py::list();
while (it != py::iterator::sentinel()) {
l.append(*it);
++it;
}
return l;
});
// Make sure that py::iterator works with std algorithms
m.def("count_none", [](py::object o) {
return std::count_if(o.begin(), o.end(), [](py::handle h) { return h.is_none(); });
});
m.def("find_none", [](py::object o) {
auto it = std::find_if(o.begin(), o.end(), [](py::handle h) { return h.is_none(); });
return it->is_none();
});
m.def("count_nonzeros", [](py::dict d) {
return std::count_if(d.begin(), d.end(), [](std::pair<py::handle, py::handle> p) {
return p.second.cast<int>() != 0;
});
});
m.def("tuple_iterator", &test_random_access_iterator<py::tuple>);
m.def("list_iterator", &test_random_access_iterator<py::list>);
m.def("sequence_iterator", &test_random_access_iterator<py::sequence>);
// test_iterator_passthrough
// #181: iterator passthrough did not compile
m.def("iterator_passthrough", [](py::iterator s) -> py::iterator {
return py::make_iterator(std::begin(s), std::end(s));
});
// test_iterator_rvp
// #388: Can't make iterators via make_iterator() with different r/v policies
static std::vector<int> list = { 1, 2, 3 };
m.def("make_iterator_1", []() { return py::make_iterator<py::return_value_policy::copy>(list); });
m.def("make_iterator_2", []() { return py::make_iterator<py::return_value_policy::automatic>(list); });
}