Object Protocol¶
- PyObject*
Py_NotImplemented
¶ The
NotImplemented
singleton, used to signal that an operation isnot implemented for the given type combination.
Py_RETURN_NOTIMPLEMENTED
¶Properly handle returning
Py_NotImplemented
from within a Cfunction (that is, increment the reference count of NotImplemented andreturn it).
- int
PyObject_Print
(PyObject *o, FILE *fp, int flags)¶ Print an objecto, on filefp. Returns
-1
on error. The flags argumentis used to enable certain printing options. The only option currently supportedisPy_PRINT_RAW
; if given, thestr()
of the object is writteninstead of therepr()
.
- int
PyObject_HasAttr
(PyObject *o,PyObject *attr_name)¶ Returns
1
ifo has the attributeattr_name, and0
otherwise. Thisis equivalent to the Python expressionhasattr(o,attr_name)
. This functionalways succeeds.Note that exceptions which occur while calling
__getattr__()
and__getattribute__()
methods will get suppressed.To get error reporting usePyObject_GetAttr()
instead.
- int
PyObject_HasAttrString
(PyObject *o, const char *attr_name)¶ Returns
1
ifo has the attributeattr_name, and0
otherwise. Thisis equivalent to the Python expressionhasattr(o,attr_name)
. This functionalways succeeds.Note that exceptions which occur while calling
__getattr__()
and__getattribute__()
methods and creating a temporary string objectwill get suppressed.To get error reporting usePyObject_GetAttrString()
instead.
- PyObject*
PyObject_GetAttr
(PyObject *o,PyObject *attr_name)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Retrieve an attribute namedattr_name from objecto. Returns the attributevalue on success, or
NULL
on failure. This is the equivalent of the Pythonexpressiono.attr_name
.
- PyObject*
PyObject_GetAttrString
(PyObject *o, const char *attr_name)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Retrieve an attribute namedattr_name from objecto. Returns the attributevalue on success, or
NULL
on failure. This is the equivalent of the Pythonexpressiono.attr_name
.
- PyObject*
PyObject_GenericGetAttr
(PyObject *o,PyObject *name)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Generic attribute getter function that is meant to be put into a typeobject’s
tp_getattro
slot. It looks for a descriptor in the dictionaryof classes in the object’s MRO as well as an attribute in the object’s__dict__
(if present). As outlined inImplementing Descriptors,data descriptors take preference over instance attributes, while non-datadescriptors don’t. Otherwise, anAttributeError
is raised.
- int
PyObject_SetAttr
(PyObject *o,PyObject *attr_name,PyObject *v)¶ Set the value of the attribute namedattr_name, for objecto, to the valuev. Raise an exception and return
-1
on failure;return0
on success. This is the equivalent of the Python statemento.attr_name=v
.Ifv is
NULL
, the attribute is deleted, however this feature isdeprecated in favour of usingPyObject_DelAttr()
.
- int
PyObject_SetAttrString
(PyObject *o, const char *attr_name,PyObject *v)¶ Set the value of the attribute namedattr_name, for objecto, to the valuev. Raise an exception and return
-1
on failure;return0
on success. This is the equivalent of the Python statemento.attr_name=v
.Ifv is
NULL
, the attribute is deleted, however this feature isdeprecated in favour of usingPyObject_DelAttrString()
.
- int
PyObject_GenericSetAttr
(PyObject *o,PyObject *name,PyObject *value)¶ Generic attribute setter and deleter function that is meantto be put into a type object’s
tp_setattro
slot. It looks for a data descriptor in thedictionary of classes in the object’s MRO, and if found it takes preferenceover setting or deleting the attribute in the instance dictionary. Otherwise, theattribute is set or deleted in the object’s__dict__
(if present).On success,0
is returned, otherwise anAttributeError
is raised and-1
is returned.
- int
PyObject_DelAttr
(PyObject *o,PyObject *attr_name)¶ Delete attribute namedattr_name, for objecto. Returns
-1
on failure.This is the equivalent of the Python statementdelo.attr_name
.
- int
PyObject_DelAttrString
(PyObject *o, const char *attr_name)¶ Delete attribute namedattr_name, for objecto. Returns
-1
on failure.This is the equivalent of the Python statementdelo.attr_name
.
- PyObject*
PyObject_GenericGetDict
(PyObject *o, void *context)¶ - Return value: New reference.
A generic implementation for the getter of a
__dict__
descriptor. Itcreates the dictionary if necessary.New in version 3.3.
- int
PyObject_GenericSetDict
(PyObject *o,PyObject *value, void *context)¶ A generic implementation for the setter of a
__dict__
descriptor. Thisimplementation does not allow the dictionary to be deleted.New in version 3.3.
- PyObject*
PyObject_RichCompare
(PyObject *o1,PyObject *o2, int opid)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Compare the values ofo1 ando2 using the operation specified byopid,which must be one of
Py_LT
,Py_LE
,Py_EQ
,Py_NE
,Py_GT
, orPy_GE
, corresponding to<
,<=
,==
,!=
,>
, or>=
respectively. This is the equivalent ofthe Python expressiono1opo2
, whereop
is the operator correspondingtoopid. Returns the value of the comparison on success, orNULL
on failure.
- int
PyObject_RichCompareBool
(PyObject *o1,PyObject *o2, int opid)¶ Compare the values ofo1 ando2 using the operation specified byopid,which must be one of
Py_LT
,Py_LE
,Py_EQ
,Py_NE
,Py_GT
, orPy_GE
, corresponding to<
,<=
,==
,!=
,>
, or>=
respectively. Returns-1
on error,0
if the result is false,1
otherwise. This is the equivalent of thePython expressiono1opo2
, whereop
is the operator corresponding toopid.
Note
Ifo1 ando2 are the same object,PyObject_RichCompareBool()
will always return1
forPy_EQ
and0
forPy_NE
.
- PyObject*
PyObject_Repr
(PyObject *o)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Compute a string representation of objecto. Returns the stringrepresentation on success,
NULL
on failure. This is the equivalent of thePython expressionrepr(o)
. Called by therepr()
built-in function.Changed in version 3.4:This function now includes a debug assertion to help ensure that itdoes not silently discard an active exception.
- PyObject*
PyObject_ASCII
(PyObject *o)¶ - Return value: New reference.
As
PyObject_Repr()
, compute a string representation of objecto, butescape the non-ASCII characters in the string returned byPyObject_Repr()
with\x
,\u
or\U
escapes. This generatesa string similar to that returned byPyObject_Repr()
in Python 2.Called by theascii()
built-in function.
- PyObject*
PyObject_Str
(PyObject *o)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Compute a string representation of objecto. Returns the stringrepresentation on success,
NULL
on failure. This is the equivalent of thePython expressionstr(o)
. Called by thestr()
built-in functionand, therefore, by theprint()
function.Changed in version 3.4:This function now includes a debug assertion to help ensure that itdoes not silently discard an active exception.
- PyObject*
PyObject_Bytes
(PyObject *o)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Compute a bytes representation of objecto.
NULL
is returned onfailure and a bytes object on success. This is equivalent to the Pythonexpressionbytes(o)
, wheno is not an integer. Unlikebytes(o)
,a TypeError is raised wheno is an integer instead of a zero-initializedbytes object.
- int
PyObject_IsSubclass
(PyObject *derived,PyObject *cls)¶ Return
1
if the classderived is identical to or derived from the classcls, otherwise return0
. In case of an error, return-1
.Ifcls is a tuple, the check will be done against every entry incls.The result will be
1
when at least one of the checks returns1
,otherwise it will be0
.Ifcls has a
__subclasscheck__()
method, it will be called todetermine the subclass status as described inPEP 3119. Otherwise,derived is a subclass ofcls if it is a direct or indirect subclass,i.e. contained incls.__mro__
.Normally only class objects, i.e. instances of
type
or a derivedclass, are considered classes. However, objects can override this by havinga__bases__
attribute (which must be a tuple of base classes).
- int
PyObject_IsInstance
(PyObject *inst,PyObject *cls)¶ Return
1
ifinst is an instance of the classcls or a subclass ofcls, or0
if not. On error, returns-1
and sets an exception.Ifcls is a tuple, the check will be done against every entry incls.The result will be
1
when at least one of the checks returns1
,otherwise it will be0
.Ifcls has a
__instancecheck__()
method, it will be called todetermine the subclass status as described inPEP 3119. Otherwise,instis an instance ofcls if its class is a subclass ofcls.An instanceinst can override what is considered its class by having a
__class__
attribute.An objectcls can override if it is considered a class, and what its baseclasses are, by having a
__bases__
attribute (which must be a tupleof base classes).
- int
PyCallable_Check
(PyObject *o)¶ Determine if the objecto is callable. Return
1
if the object is callableand0
otherwise. This function always succeeds.
- PyObject*
PyObject_Call
(PyObject *callable,PyObject *args,PyObject *kwargs)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Call a callable Python objectcallable, with arguments given by thetupleargs, and named arguments given by the dictionarykwargs.
args must not be
NULL
, use an empty tuple if no arguments are needed.If no named arguments are needed,kwargs can beNULL
.Return the result of the call on success, or raise an exception and return
NULL
on failure.This is the equivalent of the Python expression:
callable(*args,**kwargs)
.
- PyObject*
PyObject_CallObject
(PyObject *callable,PyObject *args)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Call a callable Python objectcallable, with arguments given by thetupleargs. If no arguments are needed, thenargs can be
NULL
.Return the result of the call on success, or raise an exception and return
NULL
on failure.This is the equivalent of the Python expression:
callable(*args)
.
- PyObject*
PyObject_CallFunction
(PyObject *callable, const char *format, ...)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Call a callable Python objectcallable, with a variable number of C arguments.The C arguments are described using a
Py_BuildValue()
style formatstring. The format can beNULL
, indicating that no arguments are provided.Return the result of the call on success, or raise an exception and return
NULL
on failure.This is the equivalent of the Python expression:
callable(*args)
.Note that if you only pass
PyObject*
args,PyObject_CallFunctionObjArgs()
is a faster alternative.Changed in version 3.4:The type offormat was changed from
char*
.
- PyObject*
PyObject_CallMethod
(PyObject *obj, const char *name, const char *format, ...)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Call the method namedname of objectobj with a variable number of Carguments. The C arguments are described by a
Py_BuildValue()
formatstring that should produce a tuple.The format can be
NULL
, indicating that no arguments are provided.Return the result of the call on success, or raise an exception and return
NULL
on failure.This is the equivalent of the Python expression:
obj.name(arg1,arg2,...)
.Note that if you only pass
PyObject*
args,PyObject_CallMethodObjArgs()
is a faster alternative.Changed in version 3.4:The types ofname andformat were changed from
char*
.
- PyObject*
PyObject_CallFunctionObjArgs
(PyObject *callable, ...)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Call a callable Python objectcallable, with a variable number of
PyObject*
arguments. The arguments are provided as a variable numberof parameters followed byNULL
.Return the result of the call on success, or raise an exception and return
NULL
on failure.This is the equivalent of the Python expression:
callable(arg1,arg2,...)
.
- PyObject*
PyObject_CallMethodObjArgs
(PyObject *obj,PyObject *name, ...)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Calls a method of the Python objectobj, where the name of the method is given as aPython string object inname. It is called with a variable number of
PyObject*
arguments. The arguments are provided as a variable numberof parameters followed byNULL
.Return the result of the call on success, or raise an exception and return
NULL
on failure.
- PyObject*
_PyObject_Vectorcall
(PyObject *callable,PyObject *const *args, size_t nargsf,PyObject *kwnames)¶ Call a callable Python objectcallable, using
vectorcall
if possible.args is a C array with the positional arguments.
nargsf is the number of positional arguments plus optionally the flag
PY_VECTORCALL_ARGUMENTS_OFFSET
(see below).To get actual number of arguments, usePyVectorcall_NARGS(nargsf)
.kwnames can be either
NULL
(no keyword arguments) or a tuple of keywordnames. In the latter case, the values of the keyword arguments are storedinargs after the positional arguments.The number of keyword arguments does not influencenargsf.kwnames must contain only objects of type
str
(not a subclass),and all keys must be unique.Return the result of the call on success, or raise an exception and return
NULL
on failure.This uses the vectorcall protocol if the callable supports it;otherwise, the arguments are converted to use
tp_call
.Note
This function is provisional and expected to become public in Python 3.9,with a different name and, possibly, changed semantics.If you use the function, plan for updating your code for Python 3.9.
New in version 3.8.
PY_VECTORCALL_ARGUMENTS_OFFSET
¶If set in a vectorcallnargsf argument, the callee is allowed totemporarily change
args[-1]
. In other words,args points toargument 1 (not 0) in the allocated vector.The callee must restore the value ofargs[-1]
before returning.Whenever they can do so cheaply (without additional allocation), callersare encouraged to use
PY_VECTORCALL_ARGUMENTS_OFFSET
.Doing so will allow callables such as bound methods to make their onwardcalls (which include a prependedself argument) cheaply.New in version 3.8.
- Py_ssize_t
PyVectorcall_NARGS
(size_t nargsf)¶ Given a vectorcallnargsf argument, return the actual number ofarguments.Currently equivalent to
nargsf&~PY_VECTORCALL_ARGUMENTS_OFFSET
.New in version 3.8.
- PyObject*
_PyObject_FastCallDict
(PyObject *callable,PyObject *const *args, size_t nargsf,PyObject *kwdict)¶ Same as
_PyObject_Vectorcall()
except that the keyword argumentsare passed as a dictionary inkwdict. This may beNULL
if thereare no keyword arguments.For callables supporting
vectorcall
,the arguments are internally converted to the vectorcall convention.Therefore, this function adds some overhead compared to_PyObject_Vectorcall()
.It should only be used if the caller already has a dictionary ready to use.Note
This function is provisional and expected to become public in Python 3.9,with a different name and, possibly, changed semantics.If you use the function, plan for updating your code for Python 3.9.
New in version 3.8.
- Py_hash_t
PyObject_Hash
(PyObject *o)¶ Compute and return the hash value of an objecto. On failure, return
-1
.This is the equivalent of the Python expressionhash(o)
.Changed in version 3.2:The return type is now Py_hash_t. This is a signed integer the same sizeas Py_ssize_t.
- Py_hash_t
PyObject_HashNotImplemented
(PyObject *o)¶ Set a
TypeError
indicating thattype(o)
is not hashable and return-1
.This function receives special treatment when stored in atp_hash
slot,allowing a type to explicitly indicate to the interpreter that it is nothashable.
- int
PyObject_IsTrue
(PyObject *o)¶ Returns
1
if the objecto is considered to be true, and0
otherwise.This is equivalent to the Python expressionnotnoto
. On failure, return-1
.
- int
PyObject_Not
(PyObject *o)¶ Returns
0
if the objecto is considered to be true, and1
otherwise.This is equivalent to the Python expressionnoto
. On failure, return-1
.
- PyObject*
PyObject_Type
(PyObject *o)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Wheno is non-
NULL
, returns a type object corresponding to the object typeof objecto. On failure, raisesSystemError
and returnsNULL
. Thisis equivalent to the Python expressiontype(o)
. This function increments thereference count of the return value. There’s really no reason to use thisfunction instead of the common expressiono->ob_type
, which returns apointer of typePyTypeObject*
, except when the incremented referencecount is needed.
- int
PyObject_TypeCheck
(PyObject *o,PyTypeObject *type)¶ Return true if the objecto is of typetype or a subtype oftype. Bothparameters must be non-
NULL
.
- Py_ssize_t
PyObject_Size
(PyObject *o)¶ - Py_ssize_t
PyObject_Length
(PyObject *o)¶ Return the length of objecto. If the objecto provides either the sequenceand mapping protocols, the sequence length is returned. On error,
-1
isreturned. This is the equivalent to the Python expressionlen(o)
.
- Py_ssize_t
PyObject_LengthHint
(PyObject *o, Py_ssize_t default)¶ Return an estimated length for the objecto. First try to return itsactual length, then an estimate using
__length_hint__()
, andfinally return the default value. On error return-1
. This is theequivalent to the Python expressionoperator.length_hint(o,default)
.New in version 3.4.
- PyObject*
PyObject_GetItem
(PyObject *o,PyObject *key)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Return element ofo corresponding to the objectkey or
NULL
on failure.This is the equivalent of the Python expressiono[key]
.
- int
PyObject_SetItem
(PyObject *o,PyObject *key,PyObject *v)¶ Map the objectkey to the valuev. Raise an exception andreturn
-1
on failure; return0
on success. This is theequivalent of the Python statemento[key]=v
. This functiondoesnot steal a reference tov.
- int
PyObject_DelItem
(PyObject *o,PyObject *key)¶ Remove the mapping for the objectkey from the objecto. Return
-1
on failure. This is equivalent to the Python statementdelo[key]
.
- PyObject*
PyObject_Dir
(PyObject *o)¶ - Return value: New reference.
This is equivalent to the Python expression
dir(o)
, returning a (possiblyempty) list of strings appropriate for the object argument, orNULL
if therewas an error. If the argument isNULL
, this is like the Pythondir()
,returning the names of the current locals; in this case, if no execution frameis active thenNULL
is returned butPyErr_Occurred()
will return false.