Struct pyo3::pycell::PyCell [−][src]
#[repr(C)]pub struct PyCell<T: PyClass> { /* fields omitted */ }
Expand description
PyCell
is the container type for PyClass
values.
From the Python side, PyCell<T>
is the concrete layout of T: PyClass
in the Python heap,
which means we can convert *const PyClass<T>
to *mut ffi::PyObject
.
From the Rust side, PyCell<T>
is the mutable container of T
.
Since PyCell<T: PyClass>
is always on the Python heap, we don’t have the ownership of it.
Thus, to mutate the data behind &PyCell<T>
safely, we employ the
Interior Mutability Pattern
like std::cell::RefCell.
PyCell
implements Deref<Target = PyAny>
, so you can also call methods from PyAny
when you have a PyCell<T>
.
Examples
In most cases, PyCell
is hidden behind #[pymethods]
.
However, you can construct a &PyCell
directly to test your pyclass in Rust code.
#[pyclass] struct Book { #[pyo3(get)] name: &'static str, author: &'static str, } let book = Book { name: "The Man in the High Castle", author: "Philip Kindred Dick", }; Python::with_gil(|py| { let book_cell = PyCell::new(py, book).unwrap(); // `&PyCell` implements `ToPyObject`, so you can use it in a Python snippet pyo3::py_run!(py, book_cell, "assert book_cell.name[-6:] == 'Castle'"); });
You can use slf: &PyCell<Self>
as an alternative self
receiver of #[pymethod]
,
though you’ll rarely need it.
use std::collections::HashMap; #[pyclass] #[derive(Default)] struct Counter { counter: HashMap<String, usize> } #[pymethods] impl Counter { // You can use &mut self here, but now we use &PyCell for demonstration fn increment(slf: &PyCell<Self>, name: String) -> PyResult<usize> { let mut slf_mut = slf.try_borrow_mut()?; // Now a mutable reference exists so we cannot get another one assert!(slf.try_borrow().is_err()); assert!(slf.try_borrow_mut().is_err()); let counter = slf_mut.counter.entry(name).or_insert(0); *counter += 1; Ok(*counter) } }
Implementations
Makes a new PyCell
on the Python heap and return the reference to it.
In cases where the value in the cell does not need to be accessed immediately after
creation, consider Py::new
as a more efficient
alternative.
Immutably borrows the value T
. This borrow lasts as long as the returned PyRef
exists.
Panics
Panics if the value is currently mutably borrowed. For a non-panicking variant, use
try_borrow
.
Mutably borrows the value T
. This borrow lasts as long as the returned PyRefMut
exists.
Panics
Panics if the value is currently mutably borrowed. For a non-panicking variant, use
try_borrow_mut
.
Immutably borrows the value T
, returning an error if the value is currently
mutably borrowed. This borrow lasts as long as the returned PyRef
exists.
This is the non-panicking variant of borrow
.
Examples
#[pyclass] struct Class {} Python::with_gil(|py| { let c = PyCell::new(py, Class {}).unwrap(); { let m = c.borrow_mut(); assert!(c.try_borrow().is_err()); } { let m = c.borrow(); assert!(c.try_borrow().is_ok()); } });
Mutably borrows the value T
, returning an error if the value is currently borrowed.
This borrow lasts as long as the returned PyRefMut
exists.
This is the non-panicking variant of borrow_mut
.
Examples
#[pyclass] struct Class {} Python::with_gil(|py| { let c = PyCell::new(py, Class {}).unwrap(); { let m = c.borrow(); assert!(c.try_borrow_mut().is_err()); } assert!(c.try_borrow_mut().is_ok()); });
Immutably borrows the value T
, returning an error if the value is
currently mutably borrowed.
Safety
This method is unsafe because it does not return a PyRef
,
thus leaving the borrow flag untouched. Mutably borrowing the PyCell
while the reference returned by this method is alive is undefined behaviour.
Examples
#[pyclass] struct Class {} Python::with_gil(|py| { let c = PyCell::new(py, Class {}).unwrap(); { let m = c.borrow_mut(); assert!(unsafe { c.try_borrow_unguarded() }.is_err()); } { let m = c.borrow(); assert!(unsafe { c.try_borrow_unguarded() }.is_ok()); } });
Replaces the wrapped value with a new one, returning the old value.
Panics
Panics if the value is currently borrowed.
Replaces the wrapped value with a new one computed from f
, returning the old value.
Panics
Panics if the value is currently borrowed.
Methods from Deref<Target = PyAny>
Converts this PyAny
to a concrete Python type.
Examples
use pyo3::prelude::*; use pyo3::types::{PyAny, PyDict, PyList}; Python::with_gil(|py| { let dict = PyDict::new(py); assert!(dict.is_instance::<PyAny>().unwrap()); let any: &PyAny = dict.as_ref(); assert!(any.downcast::<PyDict>().is_ok()); assert!(any.downcast::<PyList>().is_err()); });
Determines whether this object has the given attribute.
This is equivalent to the Python expression hasattr(self, attr_name)
.
Retrieves an attribute value.
This is equivalent to the Python expression self.attr_name
.
pub fn setattr<N, V>(&self, attr_name: N, value: V) -> PyResult<()> where
N: ToBorrowedObject,
V: ToBorrowedObject,
pub fn setattr<N, V>(&self, attr_name: N, value: V) -> PyResult<()> where
N: ToBorrowedObject,
V: ToBorrowedObject,
Sets an attribute value.
This is equivalent to the Python expression self.attr_name = value
.
Deletes an attribute.
This is equivalent to the Python statement del self.attr_name
.
Returns an Ordering
between self
and other
.
This is equivalent to the following Python code:
if self == other: return Equal elif a < b: return Less elif a > b: return Greater else: raise TypeError("PyAny::compare(): All comparisons returned false")
Examples
use pyo3::prelude::*; use pyo3::types::PyFloat; use std::cmp::Ordering; Python::with_gil(|py| -> PyResult<()> { let a = PyFloat::new(py, 0_f64); let b = PyFloat::new(py, 42_f64); assert_eq!(a.compare(b)?, Ordering::Less); Ok(()) })?;
It will return PyErr
for values that cannot be compared:
use pyo3::prelude::*; use pyo3::types::{PyFloat, PyString}; Python::with_gil(|py| -> PyResult<()> { let a = PyFloat::new(py, 0_f64); let b = PyString::new(py, "zero"); assert!(a.compare(b).is_err()); Ok(()) })?;
pub fn rich_compare<O>(
&self,
other: O,
compare_op: CompareOp
) -> PyResult<&PyAny> where
O: ToPyObject,
pub fn rich_compare<O>(
&self,
other: O,
compare_op: CompareOp
) -> PyResult<&PyAny> where
O: ToPyObject,
Tests whether two Python objects obey a given CompareOp
.
Depending on the value of compare_op
, this is equivalent to one of the
following Python expressions:
compare_op | Python expression |
---|---|
CompareOp::Eq | self == other |
CompareOp::Ne | self != other |
CompareOp::Lt | self < other |
CompareOp::Le | self <= other |
CompareOp::Gt | self > other |
CompareOp::Ge | self >= other |
Examples
use pyo3::prelude::*; use pyo3::types::PyInt; use pyo3::class::basic::CompareOp; Python::with_gil(|py| -> PyResult<()> { let a: &PyInt = 0_u8.into_py(py).into_ref(py).downcast()?; let b: &PyInt = 42_u8.into_py(py).into_ref(py).downcast()?; assert!(a.rich_compare(b, CompareOp::Le)?.is_true()?); Ok(()) })?;
Determines whether this object appears callable.
This is equivalent to Python’s callable()
function.
Examples
use pyo3::prelude::*; Python::with_gil(|py| -> PyResult<()> { let builtins = PyModule::import(py, "builtins")?; let print = builtins.getattr("print")?; assert!(print.is_callable()); Ok(()) })?;
This is equivalent to the Python statement assert callable(print)
.
Note that unless an API needs to distinguish between callable and non-callable objects, there is no point in checking for callability. Instead, it is better to just do the call and handle potential exceptions.
Calls the object.
This is equivalent to the Python expression self(*args, **kwargs)
.
Calls the object without arguments.
This is equivalent to the Python expression self()
.
Examples
use pyo3::prelude::*; Python::with_gil(|py| -> PyResult<()> { let module = PyModule::import(py, "builtins")?; let help = module.getattr("help")?; help.call0()?; Ok(()) })?;
This is equivalent to the Python expression help()
.
Calls the object with only positional arguments.
This is equivalent to the Python expression self(*args)
.
Examples
use pyo3::prelude::*; Python::with_gil(|py| -> PyResult<()> { let module = PyModule::import(py, "operator")?; let add = module.getattr("add")?; let args = (1,2); let value = add.call1(args)?; assert_eq!(value.extract::<i32>()?, 3); Ok(()) })?;
This is equivalent to the following Python code:
from operator import add value = add(1,2) assert value == 3
Calls a method on the object.
This is equivalent to the Python expression self.name(*args, **kwargs)
.
Examples
use pyo3::prelude::*; use pyo3::types::{PyDict, PyList}; use crate::pyo3::types::IntoPyDict; Python::with_gil(|py| -> PyResult<()> { let list = PyList::new(py, vec![3, 6, 5, 4, 7]); let kwargs = vec![("reverse", true)].into_py_dict(py); list.call_method("sort", (), Some(kwargs))?; assert_eq!(list.extract::<Vec<i32>>()?, vec![7, 6, 5, 4, 3]); Ok(()) })?;
This is equivalent to the following Python code:
my_list = [3, 6, 5, 4, 7] my_list.sort(reverse = True) assert my_list == [7, 6, 5, 4, 3]
Calls a method on the object without arguments.
This is equivalent to the Python expression self.name()
.
Examples
use pyo3::prelude::*; use pyo3::types::PyFloat; use std::f64::consts::PI; Python::with_gil(|py| -> PyResult<()> { let pi = PyFloat::new(py, PI); let ratio = pi.call_method0("as_integer_ratio")?; let (a, b) = ratio.extract::<(u64, u64)>()?; assert_eq!(a, 884_279_719_003_555); assert_eq!(b, 281_474_976_710_656); Ok(()) })?;
This is equivalent to the following Python code:
import math a, b = math.pi.as_integer_ratio()
Calls a method on the object with only positional arguments.
This is equivalent to the Python expression self.name(*args)
.
Examples
use pyo3::prelude::*; use pyo3::types::PyList; Python::with_gil(|py| -> PyResult<()> { let list = PyList::new(py, vec![1, 3, 4]); list.call_method1("insert", (1, 2))?; assert_eq!(list.extract::<Vec<u8>>()?, [1, 2, 3, 4]); Ok(()) })?;
This is equivalent to the following Python code:
list_ = [1,3,4] list_.insert(1,2) assert list_ == [1,2,3,4]
Returns whether the object is considered to be true.
This is equivalent to the Python expression bool(self)
.
Returns whether the object is considered to be None.
This is equivalent to the Python expression self is None
.
Returns true if the sequence or mapping has a length of 0.
This is equivalent to the Python expression len(self) == 0
.
Gets an item from the collection.
This is equivalent to the Python expression self[key]
.
pub fn set_item<K, V>(&self, key: K, value: V) -> PyResult<()> where
K: ToBorrowedObject,
V: ToBorrowedObject,
pub fn set_item<K, V>(&self, key: K, value: V) -> PyResult<()> where
K: ToBorrowedObject,
V: ToBorrowedObject,
Sets a collection item value.
This is equivalent to the Python expression self[key] = value
.
Deletes an item from the collection.
This is equivalent to the Python expression del self[key]
.
Takes an object and returns an iterator for it.
This is typically a new iterator but if the argument is an iterator, this returns itself.
Returns the Python type pointer for this object.
Casts the PyObject to a concrete Python object type.
This can cast only to native Python types, not types implemented in Rust.
Extracts some type from the Python object.
This is a wrapper function around FromPyObject::extract()
.
Returns the reference count for the Python object.
Computes the “repr” representation of self.
This is equivalent to the Python expression repr(self)
.
Computes the “str” representation of self.
This is equivalent to the Python expression str(self)
.
Retrieves the hash code of self.
This is equivalent to the Python expression hash(self)
.
Returns the length of the sequence or mapping.
This is equivalent to the Python expression len(self)
.
Returns the list of attributes of this object.
This is equivalent to the Python expression dir(self)
.
Checks whether this object is an instance of type T
.
This is equivalent to the Python expression isinstance(self, T)
.
Trait Implementations
Cast from a concrete Python object type to PyObject.
Cast from a concrete Python object type to PyObject. With exact type check.
Auto Trait Implementations
impl<T> !RefUnwindSafe for PyCell<T>
impl<T> Send for PyCell<T> where
T: Send,
<T as PyClass>::Dict: Send,
<<T as PyClassImpl>::BaseType as PyClassBaseType>::LayoutAsBase: Send,
<T as PyClassImpl>::ThreadChecker: Send,
<T as PyClass>::WeakRef: Send,
impl<T> Unpin for PyCell<T> where
T: Unpin,
<T as PyClass>::Dict: Unpin,
<<T as PyClassImpl>::BaseType as PyClassBaseType>::LayoutAsBase: Unpin,
<T as PyClassImpl>::ThreadChecker: Unpin,
<T as PyClass>::WeakRef: Unpin,
impl<T> UnwindSafe for PyCell<T> where
T: UnwindSafe,
<T as PyClass>::Dict: UnwindSafe,
<<T as PyClassImpl>::BaseType as PyClassBaseType>::LayoutAsBase: UnwindSafe,
<T as PyClassImpl>::ThreadChecker: UnwindSafe,
<T as PyClass>::WeakRef: UnwindSafe,
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
Convert from an arbitrary PyObject
. Read more
Convert from an arbitrary borrowed PyObject
. Read more
Convert from an arbitrary PyObject
or panic. Read more
Convert from an arbitrary PyObject
or panic. Read more
Convert from an arbitrary PyObject
. Read more
Convert from an arbitrary borrowed PyObject
. Read more
Convert from an arbitrary borrowed PyObject
. Read more