diff --git a/CHANGELOG.md b/CHANGELOG.md index 96cc1c7e..18e61e2c 100644 --- a/CHANGELOG.md +++ b/CHANGELOG.md @@ -8,6 +8,9 @@ and this project adheres to [Semantic Versioning](http://semver.org/spec/v2.0.0. ### Added - Add FFI definition `PyObject_AsFileDescriptor` [#938](https://github.com/PyO3/pyo3/pull/938) +### Changed +- Simplify internals of `#[pyo3(get)]` attribute. (Remove the hidden API `GetPropertyValue`.) [#934](https://github.com/PyO3/pyo3/pull/934) + ### Removed - Remove `ManagedPyRef` (unused, and needs specialization) [#930](https://github.com/PyO3/pyo3/pull/930) diff --git a/guide/src/class.md b/guide/src/class.md index 890b9735..a8990556 100644 --- a/guide/src/class.md +++ b/guide/src/class.md @@ -309,8 +309,38 @@ impl SubClass { ## Object properties -Property descriptor methods can be defined in a `#[pymethods]` `impl` block only and have to be -annotated with `#[getter]` and `#[setter]` attributes. For example: +PyO3 supports two ways to add properties to your `#[pyclass]`: +- For simple fields with no side effects, a `#[pyo3(get, set)]` attribute can be added directly to the field definition in the `#[pyclass]`. +- For properties which require computation you can define `#[getter]` and `#[setter]` functions in the `#[pymethods]` block. + +We'll cover each of these in the following sections. + +### Object properties using `#[pyo3(get, set)]` + +For simple cases where a member variable is just read and written with no side effects, you can declare getters and setters in your `#[pyclass]` field definition using the `pyo3` attribute, like in the example below: + +```rust +# use pyo3::prelude::*; +#[pyclass] +struct MyClass { + #[pyo3(get, set)] + num: i32 +} +``` + +The above would make the `num` property available for reading and writing from Python code as `self.num`. + +Properties can be readonly or writeonly by using just `#[pyo3(get)]` or `#[pyo3(set)]` respectively. + +To use these annotations, your field type must implement some conversion traits: +- For `get` the field type must implement both `IntoPy` and `Clone`. +- For `set` the field type must implement `FromPyObject`. + +### Object properties using `#[getter]` and `#[setter]` + +For cases which don't satisfy the `#[pyo3(get, set)]` trait requirements, or need side effects, descriptor methods can be defined in a `#[pymethods]` `impl` block. + +This is done using the `#[getter]` and `#[setter]` attributes, like in the example below: ```rust # use pyo3::prelude::*; @@ -386,20 +416,6 @@ impl MyClass { In this case, the property `number` is defined and available from Python code as `self.number`. -For simple cases where a member variable is just read and written with no side effects, you -can also declare getters and setters in your Rust struct field definition, for example: - -```rust -# use pyo3::prelude::*; -#[pyclass] -struct MyClass { - #[pyo3(get, set)] - num: i32 -} -``` - -Then it is available from Python code as `self.num`. - ## Instance methods To define a Python compatible method, an `impl` block for your struct has to be annotated with the diff --git a/pyo3-derive-backend/src/pymethod.rs b/pyo3-derive-backend/src/pymethod.rs index 58242cd7..d1f35df0 100644 --- a/pyo3-derive-backend/src/pymethod.rs +++ b/pyo3-derive-backend/src/pymethod.rs @@ -310,8 +310,7 @@ pub(crate) fn impl_wrap_getter( ( name.unraw(), quote!({ - use pyo3::derive_utils::GetPropertyValue; - (&_slf.#name).get_property_value(_py) + _slf.#name.clone() }), ) } diff --git a/src/derive_utils.rs b/src/derive_utils.rs index 76a05182..481ce228 100644 --- a/src/derive_utils.rs +++ b/src/derive_utils.rs @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ use crate::instance::PyNativeType; use crate::pyclass::PyClass; use crate::pyclass_init::PyClassInitializer; use crate::types::{PyAny, PyDict, PyModule, PyTuple}; -use crate::{ffi, GILPool, IntoPy, Py, PyCell, PyObject, Python}; +use crate::{ffi, GILPool, IntoPy, PyCell, PyObject, Python}; use std::cell::UnsafeCell; /// Description of a python parameter; used for `parse_args()`. @@ -195,32 +195,6 @@ impl>> IntoPyNewResult for PyRes } } -#[doc(hidden)] -pub trait GetPropertyValue { - fn get_property_value(&self, py: Python) -> PyObject; -} - -impl GetPropertyValue for &T -where - T: IntoPy + Clone, -{ - fn get_property_value(&self, py: Python) -> PyObject { - (*self).clone().into_py(py) - } -} - -impl GetPropertyValue for PyObject { - fn get_property_value(&self, py: Python) -> PyObject { - self.clone_ref(py) - } -} - -impl GetPropertyValue for Py { - fn get_property_value(&self, py: Python) -> PyObject { - self.clone_ref(py).into() - } -} - /// Utilities for basetype #[doc(hidden)] pub trait PyBaseTypeUtils { diff --git a/tests/test_class_basics.rs b/tests/test_class_basics.rs index 69caa559..82b4810c 100644 --- a/tests/test_class_basics.rs +++ b/tests/test_class_basics.rs @@ -141,8 +141,8 @@ fn empty_class_in_module() { #[pyclass] struct ClassWithObjectField { - // PyObject has special case for derive_utils::GetPropertyValue, - // so this test is making sure it compiles! + // It used to be that PyObject was not supported with (get, set) + // - this test is just ensuring it compiles. #[pyo3(get, set)] value: PyObject, } diff --git a/tests/test_sequence.rs b/tests/test_sequence.rs index c0a21c94..bddb7569 100644 --- a/tests/test_sequence.rs +++ b/tests/test_sequence.rs @@ -4,6 +4,10 @@ use pyo3::exceptions::ValueError; use pyo3::prelude::*; use pyo3::types::{IntoPyDict, PyList}; +use pyo3::py_run; + +mod common; + #[pyclass] struct ByteSequence { elements: Vec, @@ -193,3 +197,38 @@ fn test_inplace_repeat() { run("s = ByteSequence([1, 2]); s *= 3; assert list(s) == [1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2]"); err("s = ByteSequence([1, 2); s *= -1"); } + +// Check that #[pyo3(get, set)] works correctly for Vec + +#[pyclass] +struct GenericList { + #[pyo3(get, set)] + items: Vec, +} + +#[test] +fn test_generic_list_get() { + let gil = Python::acquire_gil(); + let py = gil.python(); + + let list: PyObject = GenericList { + items: [1, 2, 3].iter().map(|i| i.to_object(py)).collect(), + } + .into_py(py); + + py_assert!(py, list, "list.items == [1, 2, 3]"); +} + +#[test] +fn test_generic_list_set() { + let gil = Python::acquire_gil(); + let py = gil.python(); + + let list = PyCell::new(py, GenericList { items: vec![] }).unwrap(); + + py_run!(py, list, "list.items = [1, 2, 3]"); + assert_eq!( + list.borrow().items, + vec![1.to_object(py), 2.to_object(py), 3.to_object(py)] + ); +}