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Gwenaël Samain
cython
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bebb9b54
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bebb9b54
authored
May 15, 2018
by
gabrieldemarmiesse
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switching long for uintptr_t, and rephrasing some parts.
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31c06c49
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docs/src/userguide/language_basics.rst
docs/src/userguide/language_basics.rst
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docs/src/userguide/language_basics.rst
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bebb9b54
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@@ -526,26 +526,33 @@ Where C uses ``"("`` and ``")"``, Cython uses ``"<"`` and ``">"``. For example::
cdef float *q
p = <char*>q
If one of the types is a Python object for ``<type>x``, Cython will try to do a coercion.
When casting a C value to a Python object type or vice versa,
Cython will attempt a coercion. Simple examples are casts like ``<int>pyobj``,
which converts a Python number to a plain C ``int`` value, or ``<bytes>charptr``,
which copies a C ``char*`` string into a new Python bytes object.
.. note:: Cython will not
stop a casting where there is no conversion, but it will emit a warning
.
.. note:: Cython will not
prevent a redundant cast, but emits a warning for it
.
To get the address of some Python object, use a cast to a pointer type
like ``<void*>`` or ``<PyObject*>``.
You can also get the python object from a pointer to this object by doing ``<object>``.
You can also cast a C pointer back to a Python object reference
with ``<object>``, or a more specific builtin or extension type
(e.g. ``<MyExtType>ptr``). This will increase the reference count of
the object by one, i.e. the cast returns an owned reference.
Here is an example::
from __future__ import print_function
from cpython.ref cimport PyObject
from libc.stdint cimport uintptr_t
python_string = "foo"
cdef void* ptr = <void*>python_string
cdef
long adress_in_c = <long
>ptr
cdef
uintptr_t adress_in_c = <uintptr_t
>ptr
address_from_void = adress_in_c # address_from_void is a python int
cdef PyObject* ptr2 = <PyObject*>python_string
cdef
long address_in_c2 = <long
>ptr2
cdef
uintptr_t address_in_c2 = <uintptr_t
>ptr2
address_from_PyObject = address_in_c2 # address_from_PyObject is a python int
assert address_from_void == address_from_PyObject == id(python_string)
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