Manipulating Object and Value Types#
inject-code#
The inject-code
node inserts the given code into the generated code for the
given type or function, and it is a child of the object-type, value-type,
modify-function and add-function nodes.
It may contain insert-template child nodes.
<inject-code class="native | target"
position="beginning | end" since="..."
file="[file]"
snippet="[label]"/>
The class
attribute specifies which module of the generated code that
will be affected by the code injection
(see Code Generation Terminology). The class
attribute accepts the
following values:
native
: The c++ codetarget
: The binding code
If the position
attribute is set to beginning (the default), the code
is inserted at the beginning of the function. If it is set to end, the code
is inserted at the end of the function.
For a detailed description of how to above attributes interact, see Code Injection Semantics.
The optional file
attribute specifies the file name
(see Using Snippets From External Files).
The optional snippet
attribute specifies the snippet label
(see Using Snippets From External Files).
There are a number of placeholders which are replaced when injecting code (see Type System Variables).
There are severals ways to specify the code:
Embedding Code into XML#
The code can be embedded into XML (be careful to use the correct XML entities for characters like ‘<’, ‘>’, ‘&’):
<value-type>
<inject-code class="native | target"
position="beginning | end" since="...">
// the code
</inject-code>
</value-type>
Using a Template Specified in XML#
It is possible to create code templates for reuse in XML (see Using Code Templates). This allows for replacing of custom placeholders.
<value-type>
<inject-code class="native | target" class="native | target">
<insert-template name="template_name"/>
</inject-code>
</value-type>
Using Snippets From External Files#
Code snippets can also be retrieved from external files found in the typesystem search path (see -T<path>, --typesystem-paths=<path>[:<path>:...]).
<value-type>
<inject-code class="native | target"
position="beginning | end" since="..."
file="external_source.cpp"
snippet="label"/>
</value-type>
In the external file external_source.cpp
, the code between annotations
of the form:
// @snippet label
...
// @snippet label
will be extracted.
modify-field#
The modify-field
node allows you to alter the access privileges for a given
C++ field when mapping it onto the target language, and it is a child of an
object-type or a value-type node.
<object-type>
<modify-field name="..."
write="true | false"
read="true | false"
remove="true | false"
opaque-container = "yes | no"
snake-case="yes | no | both" />
</object-type>
The name
attribute is the name of the field, the optional write
and read
attributes specify the field’s access privileges in the target
language API (both are set to true by default).
The remove
attribute is an optional boolean attribute, which can
mark the field to be discarded on generation.
The optional rename
attribute can be used to change the name of the
given field in the generated target language API.
The optional opaque-container
attribute specifies whether
an opaque container should be returned on read access
(see Opaque Containers).
The optional snake-case attribute allows for overriding the value specified on the class entry or typesystem element.
modify-function#
The modify-function
node allows you to modify a given C++ function when
mapping it onto the target language, and it is a child of a function,
namespace-type, object-type or a value-type node.
Use the modify-argument node to specify which argument the
modification affects.
<object-type>
<modify-function signature="..."
since="..."
remove="true | false"
access="public | private | protected"
allow-thread="true | auto | false"
exception-handling="off | auto-off | auto-on | on"
final="true | false"
overload-number="number"
rename="..."
snake-case="yes | no | both"
deprecated = "true | false" />
</object-type>
The signature
attribute is a normalized C++ signature, excluding return
values but including potential const declarations. It is not required
when modify-function
appears as a child of a function node to
modify a global function.
The since
attribute specify the API version when this function was modified.
The allow-thread
attribute specifies whether a function should be wrapped
into Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS
and Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS
, that is,
temporarily release the GIL (global interpreter lock). Doing so is required
for any thread-related function (wait operations), functions that might call
a virtual function (potentially reimplemented in Python), and recommended for
lengthy I/O operations or similar. It has performance costs, though.
The value auto
means that it will be turned off for functions for which
it is deemed to be safe, for example, simple getters.
The attribute defaults to false
.
The exception-handling
attribute specifies whether to generate exception
handling code (nest the function call into try / catch statements). It accepts
the following values:
no, false: Do not generate exception handling code
auto-off: Generate exception handling code for functions declaring a non-empty
throw
listauto-on: Generate exception handling code unless function declares
noexcept
yes, true: Always generate exception handling code
The optional overload-number
attribute specifies the position of the
overload when checking arguments. Typically, when a number of overloads
exists, as for in example in Qt:
void QPainter::drawLine(QPointF, QPointF);
void QPainter::drawLine(QPoint, QPoint);
they will be reordered such that the check for matching arguments for the
one taking a QPoint
is done first. This is to avoid a potentially
costly implicit conversion from QPoint
to QPointF
when using the
2nd overload. There are cases though in which this is not desired;
most prominently when a class inherits from a container and overloads exist
for both types as is the case for the QPolygon
class:
class QPolygon : public QList<QPoint> {};
void QPainter::drawPolygon(QPolygon);
void QPainter::drawPolygon(QList<QPoint>);
By default, the overload taking a QList
will be checked first, trying
to avoid constructing a QPolygon
from QList
. The type check for a
list of points will succeed for a parameter of type QPolygon
, too,
since it inherits QList
. This presents a problem since the sequence
type check is costly due to it checking that each container element is a
QPoint
. It is thus preferable to check for the QPolygon
overload
first. This is achieved by specifying numbers as follows:
<object-type name="QPainter">
<modify-function signature="drawPolygon(QPolygon)" overload-number="0"/>
<modify-function signature="drawPolygon(QList<QPoint>)" overload-number="1"/>
</object-type>
Numbers should be given for all overloads; otherwise, the order will be in declaration order.
The optional final
attribute can be specified for virtual functions
and disables generating the code for overriding the function in Python
(native call). This is useful when the result type is not constructible.
The remove
attribute is an optional boolean attribute, which can
mark the function to be discarded on generation.
The optional rename
attribute can be used to change the name of the
given function in the generated target language API.
The optional access
attribute changes the access privileges of the
given function in the generated target language API.
The optional snake-case attribute allows for overriding the value specified on the class entry or typesystem element.
The optional deprecated attribute allows for overriding deprecation as detected by the C++ attribute. It works in both ways.
add-function#
The add-function
node allows you to add a given function onto the target
language, and it is a child of an object-type or value-type nodes if the
function is supposed to be a method, or namespace-type and typesystem if
the function is supposed to be a function inside a namespace or a global function.
It may contain modify-argument nodes.
Typically when adding a function some code must be injected to provide the function logic. This can be done using the inject-code node.
<object-type>
<add-function signature="..." return-type="..."
access="public | protected"
static="yes | no" classmethod="yes | no"
since="..."/>
</object-type>
The return-type
attribute defaults to void, the access
to public and the static
one to no.
The since
attribute specifies the API version when this function was added.
The classmethod
attribute specifies whether the function should be a Python class method.
It sets the METH_CLASS flag which means that PyTypeObject
instead of an instance
PyObject
is passed as self, which needs to be handled in injected code.
Note that the label “static” in Qt’s class documentation almost always means that a Python
classmethod
should be generated, because an object’s class is always accessible from the
static C++ code, while Python needs the explicit “self” parameter that classmethod
provides.
In order to create keyword argument supporting function parameters, enclose the specific function parameter with a @ in the signature field.
<add-function signature="foo(int @parameter1@,float @parameter2@)">
...
</add-function>
With keyword arguments, add-function
makes it easy to specify a default argument
within the signature field
<add-function signature="foo(int @parameter1@=1,float @parameter2@=2)">
...
</add-function>
See Sequence Protocol for adding the respective functions.
declare-function#
The declare-function
node allows you to declare a function present in
the type and it is a child of an object-type or value-type nodes
if the function is supposed to be a method, or namespace-type and
typesystem if the function is supposed to be a function inside a
namespace or a global function. It may contain modify-argument nodes.
<container-type>
<declare-function signature="..." return-type="..." since="..."/>
</container-type>
The return-type
attribute defaults to void.
The since
attribute specifies the API version when this function was
added.
This is useful to make functions known to shiboken which its code parser
does not detect. For example, in Qt 6, the append()
function of the
QList<T>
container takes an argument of parameter_type
which is
specialized to T
for simple types and const T &
for complex types
by some template expression which the code parser cannot resolve.
In that case, the function can be declared with a simple signature:
<container-type name="QList">
<declare-function signature="append(T)"/>
</container-type>
This tells shiboken a public function of that signature exists and
bindings will be created in specializations of QList
.
add-pymethoddef#
The add-pymethoddef
element allows you to add a free function to
the PyMethodDef
array of the type. No argument or result conversion
is generated, allowing for variadic functions and more flexible
arguments checking.
<add-pymethoddef name="..." function="..." flags="..." doc="..."
signatures="..."/>
The name
attribute specifies the name.
The function
attribute specifies the implementation (a static function
of type PyCFunction
).
The flags
attribute specifies the flags (typically METH_VARARGS
,
see Common Object Structures).
The optional doc
attribute specifies the documentation to be set to the
ml_doc
field.
The optional signatures
attribute specifies a semicolon-separated list
of signatures of the function.
property#
The property
element allows you to specify properties consisting of
a type and getter and setter functions.
It may appear as a child of a complex type such as object-type or value-type.
If the PySide6 extension is not present, code will be generated using the
PyGetSetDef
struct, similar to what is generated for fields.
If the PySide6 extension is present, those properties complement the
properties obtained from the Q_PROPERTY
macro in Qt-based code.
The properties will be handled in libpyside
unless code generation
is forced.
<property name="..." type="..." get="..." set="..."
generate-getsetdef="yes | no" since="..."/>
The name
attribute specifies the name of the property, the type
attribute specifies the C++ type and the get
attribute specifies the
name of the accessor function.
The optional set
attribute specifies name of the setter function.
The optional generate-getsetdef
attribute specifies whether to generate
code for if the PySide6 extension is present (indicating this property is not
handled by libpyside). It defaults to no.
The optional since
attribute specifies the API version when this
property appears.
For a typical C++ class, like:
class Test {
public:
int getValue() const;
void setValue();
};
value
can then be specified to be a property:
<value-type name="Test">
<property name="value" type="int" get="getValue" set="setValue"/>
With that, a more pythonic style can be used:
test = Test()
test.value = 42
For Qt classes (with the PySide6 extension present), additional setters
and getters that do not appear as Q_PROPERTY
, can be specified to
be properties:
<object-type name="QMainWindow">
<property name="centralWidget" type="QWidget *"
get="centralWidget" set="setCentralWidget"/>
in addition to the normal properties of QMainWindow
defined for
Qt Designer usage.
Note
In the Qt coding style, the property name typically conflicts
with the getter name. It is recommended to exclude the getter from the
wrapper generation using the remove
function modification.
configuration#
The configuration
element allows you to generate a preprocessor
condition excluding a type depending on an expression into the module
header. This is specifically tailored to the
Qt Feature system ,
but may also be used for similar systems.
It may appear as a child of a complex type such as object-type or value-type.
<configuration condition="..."/>
The condition
attribute specifies the preprocessor condition.
This is an alternative way of omitting classes depending on some
configuration (see also option --drop-type-entries="<TypeEntry0>[;TypeEntry1;...]") intended
for building several configurations from one generated source tree,
but still requires listing the correct source files in the
CMakeLists.txt
file.