mirror of
https://github.com/pybind/pybind11.git
synced 2026-03-14 20:27:47 +00:00
9f1187f97c987b4336119fb7b6dd9c1350de48d6
typing.SupportsIndex to int/float/complex type hints (#5891)
* Add typing.SupportsIndex to int/float/complex type hints
This corrects a mistake where these types were supported but the type
hint was not updated to reflect that SupportsIndex objects are accepted.
To track the resulting test failures:
The output of
"$(cat PYROOT)"/bin/python3 $HOME/clone/pybind11_scons/run_tests.py $HOME/forked/pybind11 -v
is in
~/logs/pybind11_pr5879_scons_run_tests_v_log_2025-11-10+122217.txt
* Cursor auto-fixes (partial) plus pre-commit cleanup. 7 test failures left to do.
* Fix remaining test failures, partially done by cursor, partially manually.
* Cursor-generated commit: Added the Index() tests from PR 5879.
Summary:
Changes Made
1. **C++ Bindings** (`tests/test_builtin_casters.cpp`)
• Added complex_convert and complex_noconvert functions needed for the tests
2. **Python Tests** (`tests/test_builtin_casters.py`)
`test_float_convert`:
• Added Index class with __index__ returning -7
• Added Int class with __int__ returning -5
• Added test showing Index() works with convert mode: assert pytest.approx(convert(Index())) == -7.0
• Added test showing Index() doesn't work with noconvert mode: requires_conversion(Index())
• Added additional assertions for int literals and Int() class
`test_complex_cast`:
• Expanded the test to include convert and noconvert functionality
• Added Index, Complex, Float, and Int classes
• Added test showing Index() works with convert mode: assert convert(Index()) == 1 and assert isinstance(convert(Index()), complex)
• Added test showing Index() doesn't work with noconvert mode: requires_conversion(Index())
• Added type hint assertions matching the SupportsIndex additions
These tests demonstrate that custom __index__ objects work with float and complex in convert mode, matching the typing.SupportsIndex type hint added in PR
5891.
* Reflect behavior changes going back from PR 5879 to master. This diff will have to be reapplied under PR 5879.
* Add PyPy-specific __index__ handling for complex caster
Extract PyPy-specific __index__ backporting from PR 5879 to fix PyPy 3.10
test failures in PR 5891. This adds:
1. PYBIND11_INDEX_CHECK macro in detail/common.h:
- Uses PyIndex_Check on CPython
- Uses hasattr check on PyPy (workaround for PyPy 7.3.3 behavior)
2. PyPy-specific __index__ handling in complex.h:
- Handles __index__ objects on PyPy 7.3.7's 3.8 which doesn't
implement PyLong_*'s __index__ calls
- Mirrors the logic used in numeric_caster for ints and floats
This backports __index__ handling for PyPy, matching the approach
used in PR 5879's expand-float-strict branch.
Add fast_type_map, use it authoritatively for local types and as a hint for global types (ABI breaking) (#5842)
This file contains invisible Unicode characters
This file contains invisible Unicode characters that are indistinguishable to humans but may be processed differently by a computer. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.
.. figure:: https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/raw/master/docs/pybind11-logo.png
:alt: pybind11 logo
**pybind11 (v3) — Seamless interoperability between C++ and Python**
|Latest Documentation Status| |Stable Documentation Status| |Gitter chat| |GitHub Discussions|
|CI| |Build status| |SPEC 4 — Using and Creating Nightly Wheels|
|Repology| |PyPI package| |Conda-forge| |Python Versions|
`Setuptools example <https://github.com/pybind/python_example>`_
• `Scikit-build example <https://github.com/pybind/scikit_build_example>`_
• `CMake example <https://github.com/pybind/cmake_example>`_
.. start
**pybind11** is a lightweight header-only library that exposes C++ types
in Python and vice versa, mainly to create Python bindings of existing
C++ code. Its goals and syntax are similar to the excellent
`Boost.Python <http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_58_0/libs/python/doc/>`_
library by David Abrahams: to minimize boilerplate code in traditional
extension modules by inferring type information using compile-time
introspection.
The main issue with Boost.Python—and the reason for creating such a
similar project—is Boost. Boost is an enormously large and complex suite
of utility libraries that works with almost every C++ compiler in
existence. This compatibility has its cost: arcane template tricks and
workarounds are necessary to support the oldest and buggiest of compiler
specimens. Now that C++11-compatible compilers are widely available,
this heavy machinery has become an excessively large and unnecessary
dependency.
Think of this library as a tiny self-contained version of Boost.Python
with everything stripped away that isn't relevant for binding
generation. Without comments, the core header files only require ~4K
lines of code and depend on Python (CPython 3.8+, PyPy, or GraalPy) and the C++
standard library. This compact implementation was possible thanks to some C++11
language features (specifically: tuples, lambda functions and variadic
templates). Since its creation, this library has grown beyond Boost.Python in
many ways, leading to dramatically simpler binding code in many common
situations.
Tutorial and reference documentation is provided at
`pybind11.readthedocs.io <https://pybind11.readthedocs.io/en/latest>`_.
A PDF version of the manual is available
`here <https://pybind11.readthedocs.io/_/downloads/en/latest/pdf/>`_.
And the source code is always available at
`github.com/pybind/pybind11 <https://github.com/pybind/pybind11>`_.
Core features
-------------
pybind11 can map the following core C++ features to Python:
- Functions accepting and returning custom data structures per value,
reference, or pointer
- Instance methods and static methods
- Overloaded functions
- Instance attributes and static attributes
- Arbitrary exception types
- Enumerations
- Callbacks
- Iterators and ranges
- Custom operators
- Single and multiple inheritance
- STL data structures
- Smart pointers with reference counting like ``std::shared_ptr``
- Internal references with correct reference counting
- C++ classes with virtual (and pure virtual) methods can be extended
in Python
- Integrated NumPy support (NumPy 2 requires pybind11 2.12+)
Goodies
-------
In addition to the core functionality, pybind11 provides some extra
goodies:
- CPython 3.8+, PyPy3 7.3.17+, and GraalPy 24.1+ are supported with an
implementation-agnostic interface (see older versions for older CPython
and PyPy versions).
- It is possible to bind C++11 lambda functions with captured
variables. The lambda capture data is stored inside the resulting
Python function object.
- pybind11 uses C++11 move constructors and move assignment operators
whenever possible to efficiently transfer custom data types.
- It's easy to expose the internal storage of custom data types through
Pythons' buffer protocols. This is handy e.g. for fast conversion
between C++ matrix classes like Eigen and NumPy without expensive
copy operations.
- pybind11 can automatically vectorize functions so that they are
transparently applied to all entries of one or more NumPy array
arguments.
- Python's slice-based access and assignment operations can be
supported with just a few lines of code.
- Everything is contained in just a few header files; there is no need
to link against any additional libraries.
- Binaries are generally smaller by a factor of at least 2 compared to
equivalent bindings generated by Boost.Python. A recent pybind11
conversion of PyRosetta, an enormous Boost.Python binding project,
`reported <https://graylab.jhu.edu/Sergey/2016.RosettaCon/PyRosetta-4.pdf>`_
a binary size reduction of **5.4x** and compile time reduction by
**5.8x**.
- Function signatures are precomputed at compile time (using
``constexpr``), leading to smaller binaries.
- With little extra effort, C++ types can be pickled and unpickled
similar to regular Python objects.
Supported compilers
-------------------
1. Clang/LLVM 3.3 or newer (for Apple Xcode's clang, this is 5.0.0 or
newer)
2. GCC 4.8 or newer
3. Microsoft Visual Studio 2022 or newer (2019 probably works, but was dropped in CI)
4. Intel classic C++ compiler 18 or newer (ICC 20.2 tested in CI)
5. Cygwin/GCC (previously tested on 2.5.1)
6. NVCC (CUDA 11.0 tested in CI)
7. NVIDIA PGI (20.9 tested in CI)
Supported Platforms
-------------------
* Windows, Linux, macOS, and iOS
* CPython 3.8+, Pyodide, PyPy, and GraalPy
* C++11, C++14, C++17, C++20, and C++23
About
-----
This project was created by `Wenzel
Jakob <http://rgl.epfl.ch/people/wjakob>`_. Significant features and/or
improvements to the code were contributed by
Jonas Adler,
Lori A. Burns,
Sylvain Corlay,
Eric Cousineau,
Aaron Gokaslan,
Ralf Grosse-Kunstleve,
Trent Houliston,
Axel Huebl,
@hulucc,
Yannick Jadoul,
Sergey Lyskov,
Johan Mabille,
Tomasz Miąsko,
Dean Moldovan,
Ben Pritchard,
Jason Rhinelander,
Boris Schäling,
Pim Schellart,
Henry Schreiner,
Ivan Smirnov,
Dustin Spicuzza,
Boris Staletic,
Ethan Steinberg,
Patrick Stewart,
Ivor Wanders,
and
Xiaofei Wang.
We thank Google for a generous financial contribution to the continuous
integration infrastructure used by this project.
Contributing
~~~~~~~~~~~~
See the `contributing
guide <https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md>`_
for information on building and contributing to pybind11.
License
~~~~~~~
pybind11 is provided under a BSD-style license that can be found in the
`LICENSE <https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/blob/master/LICENSE>`_
file. By using, distributing, or contributing to this project, you agree
to the terms and conditions of this license.
.. |Latest Documentation Status| image:: https://readthedocs.org/projects/pybind11/badge?version=latest
:target: http://pybind11.readthedocs.org/en/latest
.. |Stable Documentation Status| image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/docs-stable-blue.svg
:target: http://pybind11.readthedocs.org/en/stable
.. |Gitter chat| image:: https://img.shields.io/gitter/room/gitterHQ/gitter.svg
:target: https://gitter.im/pybind/Lobby
.. |CI| image:: https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/workflows/CI/badge.svg
:target: https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/actions
.. |Build status| image:: https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/riaj54pn4h08xy40?svg=true
:target: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/wjakob/pybind11
.. |PyPI package| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/pybind11.svg
:target: https://pypi.org/project/pybind11/
.. |Conda-forge| image:: https://img.shields.io/conda/vn/conda-forge/pybind11.svg
:target: https://github.com/conda-forge/pybind11-feedstock
.. |Repology| image:: https://repology.org/badge/latest-versions/python:pybind11.svg
:target: https://repology.org/project/python:pybind11/versions
.. |Python Versions| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/pybind11.svg
:target: https://pypi.org/project/pybind11/
.. |GitHub Discussions| image:: https://img.shields.io/static/v1?label=Discussions&message=Ask&color=blue&logo=github
:target: https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/discussions
.. |SPEC 4 — Using and Creating Nightly Wheels| image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/SPEC-4-green?labelColor=%23004811&color=%235CA038
:target: https://scientific-python.org/specs/spec-0004/
Description
Languages
C++
70.2%
Python
24%
CMake
5.3%
C
0.4%