There are a large number of structures which are used in the definition of object types for Python. This section describes these structures and how they are used.
All Python objects ultimately share a small number of fields at the beginning of the object's representation in memory. These are represented by the PyObject
and PyVarObject
types, which are defined, in turn, by the expansions of some macros also used, whether directly or indirectly, in the definition of all other Python objects.
PyObject
All object types are extensions of this type. This is a type which contains the information Python needs to treat a pointer to an object as an object. In a normal ?release? build, it contains only the object's reference count and a pointer to the corresponding type object. Nothing is actually declared to be a PyObject
, but every pointer to a Python object can be cast to a PyObject*
. Access to the members must be done by using the macros Py_REFCNT
and Py_TYPE
.
PyVarObject
This is an extension of PyObject
that adds the ob_size
field. This is only used for objects that have some notion of length. This type does not often appear in the Python/C API. Access to the members must be done by using the macros Py_REFCNT
, Py_TYPE
, and Py_SIZE
.
PyObject_HEAD
This is a macro used when declaring new types which represent objects without a varying length. The PyObject_HEAD macro expands to:
PyObject ob_base;
See documentation of PyObject
above.
PyObject_VAR_HEAD
This is a macro used when declaring new types which represent objects with a length that varies from instance to instance. The PyObject_VAR_HEAD macro expands to:
PyVarObject ob_base;
See documentation of PyVarObject
above.
Py_TYPE
This macro is used to access the ob_type
member of a Python object. It expands to:
(((PyObject*)(o))->ob_type)
Py_REFCNT
This macro is used to access the ob_refcnt
member of a Python object. It expands to:
(((PyObject*)(o))->ob_refcnt)
Py_SIZE
This macro is used to access the ob_size
member of a Python object. It expands to:
(((PyVarObject*)(o))->ob_size)
PyObject_HEAD_INIT
This is a macro which expands to initialization values for a new PyObject
type. This macro expands to:
_PyObject_EXTRA_INIT
1, type,
PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT
This is a macro which expands to initialization values for a new PyVarObject
type, including the ob_size
field. This macro expands to:
_PyObject_EXTRA_INIT
1, type, size,
PyCFunction
Type of the functions used to implement most Python callables in C. Functions of this type take two PyObject*
parameters and return one such value. If the return value is NULL
, an exception shall have been set. If not NULL
, the return value is interpreted as the return value of the function as exposed in Python. The function must return a new reference.
PyCFunctionWithKeywords
Type of the functions used to implement Python callables in C with signature METH_VARARGS | METH_KEYWORDS
.
_PyCFunctionFast
Type of the functions used to implement Python callables in C with signature METH_FASTCALL
.
_PyCFunctionFastWithKeywords
Type of the functions used to implement Python callables in C with signature METH_FASTCALL | METH_KEYWORDS
.
PyMethodDef
Structure used to describe a method of an extension type. This structure has four fields:
Field | C Type | Meaning |
---|---|---|
| const char * | name of the method |
| PyCFunction | pointer to the C implementation |
| int | flag bits indicating how the call should be constructed |
| const char * | points to the contents of the docstring |
The ml_meth
is a C function pointer. The functions may be of different types, but they always return PyObject*
. If the function is not of the PyCFunction
, the compiler will require a cast in the method table. Even though PyCFunction
defines the first parameter as PyObject*
, it is common that the method implementation uses the specific C type of the self object.
The ml_flags
field is a bitfield which can include the following flags. The individual flags indicate either a calling convention or a binding convention.
There are four basic calling conventions for positional arguments and two of them can be combined with METH_KEYWORDS
to support also keyword arguments. So there are a total of 6 calling conventions:
METH_VARARGS
This is the typical calling convention, where the methods have the type PyCFunction
. The function expects two PyObject*
values. The first one is the self object for methods; for module functions, it is the module object. The second parameter (often called args) is a tuple object representing all arguments. This parameter is typically processed using PyArg_ParseTuple()
or PyArg_UnpackTuple()
.
METH_VARARGS | METH_KEYWORDS
Methods with these flags must be of type PyCFunctionWithKeywords
. The function expects three parameters: self, args, kwargs where kwargs is a dictionary of all the keyword arguments or possibly NULL
if there are no keyword arguments. The parameters are typically processed using PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords()
.
METH_FASTCALL
Fast calling convention supporting only positional arguments. The methods have the type _PyCFunctionFast
. The first parameter is self, the second parameter is a C array of PyObject*
values indicating the arguments and the third parameter is the number of arguments (the length of the array).
This is not part of the limited API.
New in version 3.7.
METH_FASTCALL | METH_KEYWORDS
Extension of METH_FASTCALL
supporting also keyword arguments, with methods of type _PyCFunctionFastWithKeywords
. Keyword arguments are passed the same way as in the vectorcall protocol: there is an additional fourth PyObject*
parameter which is a tuple representing the names of the keyword arguments or possibly NULL
if there are no keywords. The values of the keyword arguments are stored in the args array, after the positional arguments.
This is not part of the limited API.
New in version 3.7.
METH_NOARGS
Methods without parameters don?t need to check whether arguments are given if they are listed with the METH_NOARGS
flag. They need to be of type PyCFunction
. The first parameter is typically named self and will hold a reference to the module or object instance. In all cases the second parameter will be NULL
.
METH_O
Methods with a single object argument can be listed with the METH_O
flag, instead of invoking PyArg_ParseTuple()
with a "O"
argument. They have the type PyCFunction
, with the self parameter, and a PyObject*
parameter representing the single argument.
These two constants are not used to indicate the calling convention but the binding when use with methods of classes. These may not be used for functions defined for modules. At most one of these flags may be set for any given method.
METH_CLASS
The method will be passed the type object as the first parameter rather than an instance of the type. This is used to create class methods, similar to what is created when using the classmethod()
built-in function.
METH_STATIC
The method will be passed NULL
as the first parameter rather than an instance of the type. This is used to create static methods, similar to what is created when using the staticmethod()
built-in function.
One other constant controls whether a method is loaded in place of another definition with the same method name.
METH_COEXIST
The method will be loaded in place of existing definitions. Without METH_COEXIST, the default is to skip repeated definitions. Since slot wrappers are loaded before the method table, the existence of a sq_contains slot, for example, would generate a wrapped method named __contains__()
and preclude the loading of a corresponding PyCFunction with the same name. With the flag defined, the PyCFunction will be loaded in place of the wrapper object and will co-exist with the slot. This is helpful because calls to PyCFunctions are optimized more than wrapper object calls.
PyMemberDef
Structure which describes an attribute of a type which corresponds to a C struct member. Its fields are:
Field | C Type | Meaning |
---|---|---|
| const char * | name of the member |
| int | the type of the member in the C struct |
| Py_ssize_t | the offset in bytes that the member is located on the type's object struct |
| int | flag bits indicating if the field should be read-only or writable |
| const char * | points to the contents of the docstring |
type
can be one of many T_
macros corresponding to various C types. When the member is accessed in Python, it will be converted to the equivalent Python type.
Macro name | C type |
---|---|
T_SHORT | short |
T_INT | int |
T_LONG | long |
T_FLOAT | float |
T_DOUBLE | double |
T_STRING | const char * |
T_OBJECT | PyObject * |
T_OBJECT_EX | PyObject * |
T_CHAR | char |
T_BYTE | char |
T_UBYTE | unsigned char |
T_UINT | unsigned int |
T_USHORT | unsigned short |
T_ULONG | unsigned long |
T_BOOL | char |
T_LONGLONG | long long |
T_ULONGLONG | unsigned long long |
T_PYSSIZET | Py_ssize_t |
T_OBJECT
and T_OBJECT_EX
differ in that T_OBJECT
returns None
if the member is NULL
and T_OBJECT_EX
raises an AttributeError
. Try to use T_OBJECT_EX
over T_OBJECT
because T_OBJECT_EX
handles use of the del
statement on that attribute more correctly than T_OBJECT
.
flags
can be 0
for write and read access or READONLY
for read-only access. Using T_STRING
for type
implies READONLY
. T_STRING
data is interpreted as UTF-8. Only T_OBJECT
and T_OBJECT_EX
members can be deleted. (They are set to NULL
).
PyGetSetDef
Structure to define property-like access for a type. See also description of the PyTypeObject.tp_getset
slot.
Field | C Type | Meaning |
---|---|---|
name | const char * | attribute name |
get | getter | C Function to get the attribute |
set | setter | optional C function to set or delete the attribute, if omitted the attribute is readonly |
doc | const char * | optional docstring |
closure | void * | optional function pointer, providing additional data for getter and setter |
The get
function takes one PyObject*
parameter (the instance) and a function pointer (the associated closure
):
typedef PyObject *(*getter)(PyObject *, void *);
It should return a new reference on success or NULL
with a set exception on failure.
set
functions take two PyObject*
parameters (the instance and the value to be set) and a function pointer (the associated closure
):
typedef int (*setter)(PyObject *, PyObject *, void *);
In case the attribute should be deleted the second parameter is NULL
. Should return 0
on success or -1
with a set exception on failure.
PyObject ob_base;
See documentation of PyObject
above.
PyObject_VAR_HEAD
This is a macro used when declaring new types which represent objects with a length that varies from instance to instance. The PyObject_VAR_HEAD macro expands to:
PyVarObject ob_base;
See documentation of PyVarObject
above.
Py_TYPE
This macro is used to access the ob_type
member of a Python object. It expands to:
(((PyObject*)(o))->ob_type)
Py_REFCNT
This macro is used to access the ob_refcnt
member of a Python object. It expands to:
(((PyObject*)(o))->ob_refcnt)
Py_SIZE
This macro is used to access the ob_size
member of a Python object. It expands to:
(((PyVarObject*)(o))->ob_size)
PyObject_HEAD_INIT
This is a macro which expands to initialization values for a new PyObject
type. This macro expands to:
_PyObject_EXTRA_INIT
1, type,
PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT
This is a macro which expands to initialization values for a new PyVarObject
type, including the ob_size
field. This macro expands to:
_PyObject_EXTRA_INIT
1, type, size,
PyCFunction
Type of the functions used to implement most Python callables in C. Functions of this type take two PyObject*
parameters and return one such value. If the return value is NULL
, an exception shall have been set. If not NULL
, the return value is interpreted as the return value of the function as exposed in Python. The function must return a new reference.
PyCFunctionWithKeywords
Type of the functions used to implement Python callables in C with signature METH_VARARGS | METH_KEYWORDS
.
_PyCFunctionFast
Type of the functions used to implement Python callables in C with signature METH_FASTCALL
.
_PyCFunctionFastWithKeywords
Type of the functions used to implement Python callables in C with signature METH_FASTCALL | METH_KEYWORDS
.
PyMethodDef
Structure used to describe a method of an extension type. This structure has four fields:
Field | C Type | Meaning |
---|---|---|
| const char * | name of the method |
| PyCFunction | pointer to the C implementation |
| int | flag bits indicating how the call should be constructed |
| const char * | points to the contents of the docstring |
The ml_meth
is a C function pointer. The functions may be of different types, but they always return PyObject*
. If the function is not of the PyCFunction
, the compiler will require a cast in the method table. Even though PyCFunction
defines the first parameter as PyObject*
, it is common that the method implementation uses the specific C type of the self object.
The ml_flags
field is a bitfield which can include the following flags. The individual flags indicate either a calling convention or a binding convention.
There are four basic calling conventions for positional arguments and two of them can be combined with METH_KEYWORDS
to support also keyword arguments. So there are a total of 6 calling conventions:
METH_VARARGS
This is the typical calling convention, where the methods have the type PyCFunction
. The function expects two PyObject*
values. The first one is the self object for methods; for module functions, it is the module object. The second parameter (often called args) is a tuple object representing all arguments. This parameter is typically processed using PyArg_ParseTuple()
or PyArg_UnpackTuple()
.
METH_VARARGS | METH_KEYWORDS
Methods with these flags must be of type PyCFunctionWithKeywords
. The function expects three parameters: self, args, kwargs where kwargs is a dictionary of all the keyword arguments or possibly NULL
if there are no keyword arguments. The parameters are typically processed using PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords()
.
METH_FASTCALL
Fast calling convention supporting only positional arguments. The methods have the type _PyCFunctionFast
. The first parameter is self, the second parameter is a C array of PyObject*
values indicating the arguments and the third parameter is the number of arguments (the length of the array).
This is not part of the limited API.
New in version 3.7.
METH_FASTCALL | METH_KEYWORDS
Extension of METH_FASTCALL
supporting also keyword arguments, with methods of type _PyCFunctionFastWithKeywords
. Keyword arguments are passed the same way as in the vectorcall protocol: there is an additional fourth PyObject*
parameter which is a tuple representing the names of the keyword arguments or possibly NULL
if there are no keywords. The values of the keyword arguments are stored in the args array, after the positional arguments.
This is not part of the limited API.
New in version 3.7.
METH_NOARGS
Methods without parameters don?t need to check whether arguments are given if they are listed with the METH_NOARGS
flag. They need to be of type PyCFunction
. The first parameter is typically named self and will hold a reference to the module or object instance. In all cases the second parameter will be NULL
.
METH_O
Methods with a single object argument can be listed with the METH_O
flag, instead of invoking PyArg_ParseTuple()
with a "O"
argument. They have the type PyCFunction
, with the self parameter, and a PyObject*
parameter representing the single argument.
These two constants are not used to indicate the calling convention but the binding when use with methods of classes. These may not be used for functions defined for modules. At most one of these flags may be set for any given method.
METH_CLASS
The method will be passed the type object as the first parameter rather than an instance of the type. This is used to create class methods, similar to what is created when using the classmethod()
built-in function.
METH_STATIC
The method will be passed NULL
as the first parameter rather than an instance of the type. This is used to create static methods, similar to what is created when using the staticmethod()
built-in function.
One other constant controls whether a method is loaded in place of another definition with the same method name.
METH_COEXIST
The method will be loaded in place of existing definitions. Without METH_COEXIST, the default is to skip repeated definitions. Since slot wrappers are loaded before the method table, the existence of a sq_contains slot, for example, would generate a wrapped method named __contains__()
and preclude the loading of a corresponding PyCFunction with the same name. With the flag defined, the PyCFunction will be loaded in place of the wrapper object and will co-exist with the slot. This is helpful because calls to PyCFunctions are optimized more than wrapper object calls.
PyMemberDef
Structure which describes an attribute of a type which corresponds to a C struct member. Its fields are:
Field | C Type | Meaning |
---|---|---|
| const char * | name of the member |
| int | the type of the member in the C struct |
| Py_ssize_t | the offset in bytes that the member is located on the type's object struct |
| int | flag bits indicating if the field should be read-only or writable |
| const char * | points to the contents of the docstring |
type
can be one of many T_
macros corresponding to various C types. When the member is accessed in Python, it will be converted to the equivalent Python type.
Macro name | C type |
---|---|
T_SHORT | short |
T_INT | int |
T_LONG | long |
T_FLOAT | float |
T_DOUBLE | double |
T_STRING | const char * |
T_OBJECT | PyObject * |
T_OBJECT_EX | PyObject * |
T_CHAR | char |
T_BYTE | char |
T_UBYTE | unsigned char |
T_UINT | unsigned int |
T_USHORT | unsigned short |
T_ULONG | unsigned long |
T_BOOL | char |
T_LONGLONG | long long |
T_ULONGLONG | unsigned long long |
T_PYSSIZET | Py_ssize_t |
T_OBJECT
and T_OBJECT_EX
differ in that T_OBJECT
returns None
if the member is NULL
and T_OBJECT_EX
raises an AttributeError
. Try to use T_OBJECT_EX
over T_OBJECT
because T_OBJECT_EX
handles use of the del
statement on that attribute more correctly than T_OBJECT
.
flags
can be 0
for write and read access or READONLY
for read-only access. Using T_STRING
for type
implies READONLY
. T_STRING
data is interpreted as UTF-8. Only T_OBJECT
and T_OBJECT_EX
members can be deleted. (They are set to NULL
).
PyGetSetDef
Structure to define property-like access for a type. See also description of the PyTypeObject.tp_getset
slot.
Field | C Type | Meaning |
---|---|---|
name | const char * | attribute name |
get | getter | C Function to get the attribute |
set | setter | optional C function to set or delete the attribute, if omitted the attribute is readonly |
doc | const char * | optional docstring |
closure | void * | optional function pointer, providing additional data for getter and setter |
The get
function takes one PyObject*
parameter (the instance) and a function pointer (the associated closure
):
typedef PyObject *(*getter)(PyObject *, void *);
It should return a new reference on success or NULL
with a set exception on failure.
set
functions take two PyObject*
parameters (the instance and the value to be set) and a function pointer (the associated closure
):
typedef int (*setter)(PyObject *, PyObject *, void *);
In case the attribute should be deleted the second parameter is NULL
. Should return 0
on success or -1
with a set exception on failure.