Merge pull request #3222 from krpatter-intc/getitem_example

simple getitem example
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David Hewitt 2023-06-16 06:58:49 +00:00 committed by GitHub
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[package]
authors = ["{{authors}}"]
name = "{{project-name}}"
version = "0.1.0"
edition = "2021"
[lib]
name = "getitem"
crate-type = ["cdylib"]
[dependencies]
pyo3 = { version = "{{PYO3_VERSION}}", features = ["extension-module"] }

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variable::set("PYO3_VERSION", "0.19.0");
file::rename(".template/Cargo.toml", "Cargo.toml");
file::rename(".template/pyproject.toml", "pyproject.toml");
file::delete(".template");

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[build-system]
requires = ["maturin>=1,<2"]
build-backend = "maturin"
[project]
name = "{{project-name}}"
version = "0.1.0"

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[package]
name = "getitem"
version = "0.1.0"
edition = "2021"
[lib]
name = "getitem"
crate-type = ["cdylib"]
[dependencies]
pyo3 = { path = "../../", features = ["extension-module"] }
[workspace]

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include pyproject.toml Cargo.toml
recursive-include src *

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# getitem
A project showcasing how to create a `__getitem__` override that also showcases how to deal with multiple incoming types
## Relevant Documentation
Some of the relevant documentation links for this example:
* Converting Slices to Indices: https://docs.rs/pyo3/latest/pyo3/types/struct.PySlice.html#method.indices
* GetItem Docs: https://pyo3.rs/latest/class/protocols.html?highlight=__getitem__#mapping--sequence-types
* Extract: https://pyo3.rs/latest/conversions/traits.html?highlight=extract#extract-and-the-frompyobject-trait
* Downcast and getattr: https://pyo3.rs/v0.19.0/types.html?highlight=getattr#pyany
## Building and Testing
To build this package, first install `maturin`:
```shell
pip install maturin
```
To build and test use `maturin develop`:
```shell
pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
maturin develop
pytest
```
Alternatively, install nox and run the tests inside an isolated environment:
```shell
nox
```
## Copying this example
Use [`cargo-generate`](https://crates.io/crates/cargo-generate):
```bash
$ cargo install cargo-generate
$ cargo generate --git https://github.com/PyO3/pyo3 examples/decorator
```
(`cargo generate` will take a little while to clone the PyO3 repo first; be patient when waiting for the command to run.)

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[template]
ignore = [".nox"]
[hooks]
pre = [".template/pre-script.rhai"]

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import nox
@nox.session
def python(session):
session.install("-rrequirements-dev.txt")
session.install("maturin")
session.run_always("maturin", "develop")
session.run("pytest")

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[build-system]
requires = ["maturin>=1,<2"]
build-backend = "maturin"
[project]
name = "getitem"
version = "0.1.0"
classifiers = [
"License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License",
"Development Status :: 3 - Alpha",
"Intended Audience :: Developers",
"Programming Language :: Python",
"Programming Language :: Rust",
"Operating System :: POSIX",
"Operating System :: MacOS :: MacOS X",
]

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pytest>=3.5.0
pip>=21.3
maturin>=1,<2

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// This is a very fake example of how to check __getitem__ parameter and handle appropriately
use pyo3::exceptions::PyTypeError;
use pyo3::prelude::*;
use pyo3::types::PySlice;
use std::os::raw::c_long;
#[derive(FromPyObject)]
enum IntOrSlice<'py> {
Int(i32),
Slice(&'py PySlice),
}
#[pyclass]
struct ExampleContainer {
// represent the maximum length our container is pretending to be
max_length: i32,
}
#[pymethods]
impl ExampleContainer {
#[new]
fn new() -> Self {
ExampleContainer { max_length: 100 }
}
fn __getitem__(&self, key: &PyAny) -> PyResult<i32> {
if let Ok(position) = key.extract::<i32>() {
return Ok(position);
} else if let Ok(slice) = key.downcast::<PySlice>() {
// METHOD 1 - the use PySliceIndices to help with bounds checking and for cases when only start or end are provided
// in this case the start/stop/step all filled in to give valid values based on the max_length given
let index = slice.indices(self.max_length as c_long).unwrap();
let _delta = index.stop - index.start;
// METHOD 2 - Do the getattr manually really only needed if you have some special cases for stop/_step not being present
// convert to indices and this will help you deal with stop being the max length
let start: i32 = slice.getattr("start")?.extract()?;
// This particular example assumes stop is present, but note that if not present, this will cause us to return due to the
// extract failing. Not needing custom code to deal with this is a good reason to use the Indices method.
let stop: i32 = slice.getattr("stop")?.extract()?;
// example of grabbing step since it is not always present
let _step: i32 = match slice.getattr("step")?.extract() {
// if no value found assume step is 1
Ok(v) => v,
Err(_) => 1 as i32,
};
// Use something like this if you don't support negative stepping and want to give users
// leeway on how they provide their ordering
let (start, stop) = if start > stop {
(stop, start)
} else {
(start, stop)
};
let delta = stop - start;
return Ok(delta);
} else {
return Err(PyTypeError::new_err("Unsupported type"));
}
}
fn __setitem__(&self, idx: IntOrSlice, value: u32) -> PyResult<()> {
match idx {
IntOrSlice::Slice(slice) => {
let index = slice.indices(self.max_length as c_long).unwrap();
println!("Got a slice! {}-{}, step: {}, value: {}", index.start, index.stop, index.step, value);
}
IntOrSlice::Int(index) => {
println!("Got an index! {} : value: {}", index, value);
}
}
Ok(())
}
}
#[pymodule]
#[pyo3(name = "getitem")]
fn example(_py: Python<'_>, m: &PyModule) -> PyResult<()> {
// ? -https://github.com/PyO3/maturin/issues/475
m.add_class::<ExampleContainer>()?;
Ok(())
}

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import getitem
import pytest
def test_simple():
container = getitem.ExampleContainer()
assert container[3] == 3
assert container[4] == 4
assert container[-1] == -1
assert container[5:3] == 2
assert container[3:5] == 2
# test setitem, but this just displays, no return to check
container[3:5] = 2
container[2] = 2
# and note we will get an error on this one since we didn't
# add strings
with pytest.raises(TypeError):
container["foo"] = 2

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Simple getitem example showing type-check for possible attribute types