PySide Shiboken Sequence Protocol: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Henri Vikki (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
AutoSpider (talk | contribs) (Rename category "LanguageBindings::PySide" -> "PySide") |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Category | [[Category:PySide]] | ||
Support for the sequence protocol is achieved adding functions with special names, this is done using the add-function tag. | Support for the sequence protocol is achieved adding functions with special names, this is done using the add-function tag. |
Latest revision as of 03:31, 5 June 2016
Support for the sequence protocol is achieved adding functions with special names, this is done using the add-function tag.
The special function names are:
Function name | Parameters | Return type | CPython equivalent |
---|---|---|---|
__len__ | PyObject* self | Py_ssize_t | PySequence_Size |
__getitem__ | PyObject* self, Py_ssize_t _i | PyObject* | PySequence_GetItem |
__setitem__ | PyObject* self, Py_ssize_t _i, PyObject* _value | int | PySequence_SetItem |
__contains__ | PyObject* self, PyObject* _value | int | PySequence_Contains |
__concat__ | PyObject* self, PyObject* _other | PyObject* | PySequence_Concat |
You just need to inform the function name to the add-function tag, without any parameter or return type information, when you do it, Shiboken will create a C function with parameters and return type definied by the table above.
The function needs to follow the same semantics of the CPython equivalent function, the only way to do it is using the inject-code tag.