Classes

This section presents advanced binding code for classes and it is assumed that you are already familiar with the basics from Object-oriented code.

Overriding virtual functions in Python

Suppose that a C++ class or interface has a virtual function that we’d like to override from within Python (we’ll focus on the class Animal; Dog is given as a specific example of how one would do this with traditional C++ code).

class Animal {
public:
    virtual ~Animal() { }
    virtual std::string go(int n_times) = 0;
};

class Dog : public Animal {
public:
    std::string go(int n_times) override {
        std::string result;
        for (int i=0; i<n_times; ++i)
            result += "woof! ";
        return result;
    }
};

Let’s also suppose that we are given a plain function which calls the function go() on an arbitrary Animal instance.

std::string call_go(Animal *animal) {
    return animal->go(3);
}

Normally, the binding code for these classes would look as follows:

PYBIND11_MODULE(example, m) {
    py::class_<Animal>(m, "Animal")
        .def("go", &Animal::go);

    py::class_<Dog, Animal>(m, "Dog")
        .def(py::init<>());

    m.def("call_go", &call_go);
}

However, these bindings are impossible to extend: Animal is not constructible, and we clearly require some kind of “trampoline” that redirects virtual calls back to Python.

Defining a new type of Animal from within Python is possible but requires a helper class that is defined as follows:

class PyAnimal : public Animal {
public:
    /* Inherit the constructors */
    using Animal::Animal;

    /* Trampoline (need one for each virtual function) */
    std::string go(int n_times) override {
        PYBIND11_OVERRIDE_PURE(
            std::string, /* Return type */
            Animal,      /* Parent class */
            go,          /* Name of function in C++ (must match Python name) */
            n_times      /* Argument(s) */
        );
    }
};

The macro PYBIND11_OVERRIDE_PURE should be used for pure virtual functions, and PYBIND11_OVERRIDE should be used for functions which have a default implementation. There are also two alternate macros PYBIND11_OVERRIDE_PURE_NAME and PYBIND11_OVERRIDE_NAME which take a string-valued name argument between the Parent class and Name of the function slots, which defines the name of function in Python. This is required when the C++ and Python versions of the function have different names, e.g. operator() vs __call__.

The binding code also needs a few minor adaptations (highlighted):

PYBIND11_MODULE(example, m) {
    py::class_<Animal, PyAnimal /* <--- trampoline*/>(m, "Animal")
        .def(py::init<>())
        .def("go", &Animal::go);

    py::class_<Dog, Animal>(m, "Dog")
        .def(py::init<>());

    m.def("call_go", &call_go);
}

Importantly, pybind11 is made aware of the trampoline helper class by specifying it as an extra template argument to class_. (This can also be combined with other template arguments such as a custom holder type; the order of template types does not matter). Following this, we are able to define a constructor as usual.

Bindings should be made against the actual class, not the trampoline helper class.

py::class_<Animal, PyAnimal /* <--- trampoline*/>(m, "Animal");
    .def(py::init<>())
    .def("go", &PyAnimal::go); /* <--- THIS IS WRONG, use &Animal::go */

Note, however, that the above is sufficient for allowing python classes to extend Animal, but not Dog: see Combining virtual functions and inheritance for the necessary steps required to providing proper overriding support for inherited classes.

The Python session below shows how to override Animal::go and invoke it via a virtual method call.

>>> from example import *
>>> d = Dog()
>>> call_go(d)
'woof! woof! woof! '
>>> class Cat(Animal):
...     def go(self, n_times):
...         return "meow! " * n_times
...
>>> c = Cat()
>>> call_go(c)
'meow! meow! meow! '

If you are defining a custom constructor in a derived Python class, you must ensure that you explicitly call the bound C++ constructor using __init__, regardless of whether it is a default constructor or not. Otherwise, the memory for the C++ portion of the instance will be left uninitialized, which will generally leave the C++ instance in an invalid state and cause undefined behavior if the C++ instance is subsequently used.

Changed in version 2.6: The default pybind11 metaclass will throw a TypeError when it detects that __init__ was not called by a derived class.

Here is an example:

class Dachshund(Dog):
    def __init__(self, name):
        Dog.__init__(self)  # Without this, a TypeError is raised.
        self.name = name

    def bark(self):
        return "yap!"

Note that a direct __init__ constructor should be called, and super() should not be used. For simple cases of linear inheritance, super() may work, but once you begin mixing Python and C++ multiple inheritance, things will fall apart due to differences between Python’s MRO and C++’s mechanisms.

Please take a look at the General notes regarding convenience macros before using this feature.

Note

When the overridden type returns a reference or pointer to a type that pybind11 converts from Python (for example, numeric values, std::string, and other built-in value-converting types), there are some limitations to be aware of:

  • because in these cases there is no C++ variable to reference (the value is stored in the referenced Python variable), pybind11 provides one in the PYBIND11_OVERRIDE macros (when needed) with static storage duration. Note that this means that invoking the overridden method on any instance will change the referenced value stored in all instances of that type.

  • Attempts to modify a non-const reference will not have the desired effect: it will change only the static cache variable, but this change will not propagate to underlying Python instance, and the change will be replaced the next time the override is invoked.

Warning

The PYBIND11_OVERRIDE and accompanying macros used to be called PYBIND11_OVERLOAD up until pybind11 v2.5.0, and get_override() used to be called get_overload. This naming was corrected and the older macro and function names may soon be deprecated, in order to reduce confusion with overloaded functions and methods and py::overload_cast (see Object-oriented code).

See also

The file tests/test_virtual_functions.cpp contains a complete example that demonstrates how to override virtual functions using pybind11 in more detail.

Combining virtual functions and inheritance

When combining virtual methods with inheritance, you need to be sure to provide an override for each method for which you want to allow overrides from derived python classes. For example, suppose we extend the above Animal/Dog example as follows:

class Animal {
public:
    virtual std::string go(int n_times) = 0;
    virtual std::string name() { return "unknown"; }
};
class Dog : public Animal {
public:
    std::string go(int n_times) override {
        std::string result;
        for (int i=0; i<n_times; ++i)
            result += bark() + " ";
        return result;
    }
    virtual std::string bark() { return "woof!"; }
};

then the trampoline class for Animal must, as described in the previous section, override go() and name(), but in order to allow python code to inherit properly from Dog, we also need a trampoline class for Dog that overrides both the added bark() method and the go() and name() methods inherited from Animal (even though Dog doesn’t directly override the name() method):

class PyAnimal : public Animal {
public:
    using Animal::Animal; // Inherit constructors
    std::string go(int n_times) override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE_PURE(std::string, Animal, go, n_times); }
    std::string name() override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE(std::string, Animal, name, ); }
};
class PyDog : public Dog {
public:
    using Dog::Dog; // Inherit constructors
    std::string go(int n_times) override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE(std::string, Dog, go, n_times); }
    std::string name() override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE(std::string, Dog, name, ); }
    std::string bark() override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE(std::string, Dog, bark, ); }
};

Note

Note the trailing commas in the PYBIND11_OVERRIDE calls to name() and bark(). These are needed to portably implement a trampoline for a function that does not take any arguments. For functions that take a nonzero number of arguments, the trailing comma must be omitted.

A registered class derived from a pybind11-registered class with virtual methods requires a similar trampoline class, even if it doesn’t explicitly declare or override any virtual methods itself:

class Husky : public Dog {};
class PyHusky : public Husky {
public:
    using Husky::Husky; // Inherit constructors
    std::string go(int n_times) override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE_PURE(std::string, Husky, go, n_times); }
    std::string name() override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE(std::string, Husky, name, ); }
    std::string bark() override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE(std::string, Husky, bark, ); }
};

There is, however, a technique that can be used to avoid this duplication (which can be especially helpful for a base class with several virtual methods). The technique involves using template trampoline classes, as follows:

template <class AnimalBase = Animal> class PyAnimal : public AnimalBase {
public:
    using AnimalBase::AnimalBase; // Inherit constructors
    std::string go(int n_times) override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE_PURE(std::string, AnimalBase, go, n_times); }
    std::string name() override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE(std::string, AnimalBase, name, ); }
};
template <class DogBase = Dog> class PyDog : public PyAnimal<DogBase> {
public:
    using PyAnimal<DogBase>::PyAnimal; // Inherit constructors
    // Override PyAnimal's pure virtual go() with a non-pure one:
    std::string go(int n_times) override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE(std::string, DogBase, go, n_times); }
    std::string bark() override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE(std::string, DogBase, bark, ); }
};

This technique has the advantage of requiring just one trampoline method to be declared per virtual method and pure virtual method override. It does, however, require the compiler to generate at least as many methods (and possibly more, if both pure virtual and overridden pure virtual methods are exposed, as above).

The classes are then registered with pybind11 using:

py::class_<Animal, PyAnimal<>> animal(m, "Animal");
py::class_<Dog, Animal, PyDog<>> dog(m, "Dog");
py::class_<Husky, Dog, PyDog<Husky>> husky(m, "Husky");
// ... add animal, dog, husky definitions

Note that Husky did not require a dedicated trampoline template class at all, since it neither declares any new virtual methods nor provides any pure virtual method implementations.

With either the repeated-virtuals or templated trampoline methods in place, you can now create a python class that inherits from Dog:

class ShihTzu(Dog):
    def bark(self):
        return "yip!"

See also

See the file tests/test_virtual_functions.cpp for complete examples using both the duplication and templated trampoline approaches.

Extended trampoline class functionality

Forced trampoline class initialisation

The trampoline classes described in the previous sections are, by default, only initialized when needed. More specifically, they are initialized when a python class actually inherits from a registered type (instead of merely creating an instance of the registered type), or when a registered constructor is only valid for the trampoline class but not the registered class. This is primarily for performance reasons: when the trampoline class is not needed for anything except virtual method dispatching, not initializing the trampoline class improves performance by avoiding needing to do a run-time check to see if the inheriting python instance has an overridden method.

Sometimes, however, it is useful to always initialize a trampoline class as an intermediate class that does more than just handle virtual method dispatching. For example, such a class might perform extra class initialization, extra destruction operations, and might define new members and methods to enable a more python-like interface to a class.

In order to tell pybind11 that it should always initialize the trampoline class when creating new instances of a type, the class constructors should be declared using py::init_alias<Args, ...>() instead of the usual py::init<Args, ...>(). This forces construction via the trampoline class, ensuring member initialization and (eventual) destruction.

See also

See the file tests/test_virtual_functions.cpp for complete examples showing both normal and forced trampoline instantiation.

Different method signatures

The macro’s introduced in Overriding virtual functions in Python cover most of the standard use cases when exposing C++ classes to Python. Sometimes it is hard or unwieldy to create a direct one-on-one mapping between the arguments and method return type.

An example would be when the C++ signature contains output arguments using references (See also Limitations involving reference arguments). Another way of solving this is to use the method body of the trampoline class to do conversions to the input and return of the Python method.

The main building block to do so is the get_override(), this function allows retrieving a method implemented in Python from within the trampoline’s methods. Consider for example a C++ method which has the signature bool myMethod(int32_t& value), where the return indicates whether something should be done with the value. This can be made convenient on the Python side by allowing the Python function to return None or an int:

bool MyClass::myMethod(int32_t& value)
{
    pybind11::gil_scoped_acquire gil;  // Acquire the GIL while in this scope.
    // Try to look up the overridden method on the Python side.
    pybind11::function override = pybind11::get_override(this, "myMethod");
    if (override) {  // method is found
        auto obj = override(value);  // Call the Python function.
        if (py::isinstance<py::int_>(obj)) {  // check if it returned a Python integer type
            value = obj.cast<int32_t>();  // Cast it and assign it to the value.
            return true;  // Return true; value should be used.
        } else {
            return false;  // Python returned none, return false.
        }
    }
    return false;  // Alternatively return MyClass::myMethod(value);
}

Custom constructors

The syntax for binding constructors was previously introduced, but it only works when a constructor of the appropriate arguments actually exists on the C++ side. To extend this to more general cases, pybind11 makes it possible to bind factory functions as constructors. For example, suppose you have a class like this:

class Example {
private:
    Example(int); // private constructor
public:
    // Factory function:
    static Example create(int a) { return Example(a); }
};

py::class_<Example>(m, "Example")
    .def(py::init(&Example::create));

While it is possible to create a straightforward binding of the static create method, it may sometimes be preferable to expose it as a constructor on the Python side. This can be accomplished by calling .def(py::init(...)) with the function reference returning the new instance passed as an argument. It is also possible to use this approach to bind a function returning a new instance by raw pointer or by the holder (e.g. std::unique_ptr).

The following example shows the different approaches:

class Example {
private:
    Example(int); // private constructor
public:
    // Factory function - returned by value:
    static Example create(int a) { return Example(a); }

    // These constructors are publicly callable:
    Example(double);
    Example(int, int);
    Example(std::string);
};

py::class_<Example>(m, "Example")
    // Bind the factory function as a constructor:
    .def(py::init(&Example::create))
    // Bind a lambda function returning a pointer wrapped in a holder:
    .def(py::init([](std::string arg) {
        return std::unique_ptr<Example>(new Example(arg));
    }))
    // Return a raw pointer:
    .def(py::init([](int a, int b) { return new Example(a, b); }))
    // You can mix the above with regular C++ constructor bindings as well:
    .def(py::init<double>())
    ;

When the constructor is invoked from Python, pybind11 will call the factory function and store the resulting C++ instance in the Python instance.

When combining factory functions constructors with virtual function trampolines there are two approaches. The first is to add a constructor to the alias class that takes a base value by rvalue-reference. If such a constructor is available, it will be used to construct an alias instance from the value returned by the factory function. The second option is to provide two factory functions to py::init(): the first will be invoked when no alias class is required (i.e. when the class is being used but not inherited from in Python), and the second will be invoked when an alias is required.

You can also specify a single factory function that always returns an alias instance: this will result in behaviour similar to py::init_alias<...>(), as described in the extended trampoline class documentation.

The following example shows the different factory approaches for a class with an alias:

#include <pybind11/factory.h>
class Example {
public:
    // ...
    virtual ~Example() = default;
};
class PyExample : public Example {
public:
    using Example::Example;
    PyExample(Example &&base) : Example(std::move(base)) {}
};
py::class_<Example, PyExample>(m, "Example")
    // Returns an Example pointer.  If a PyExample is needed, the Example
    // instance will be moved via the extra constructor in PyExample, above.
    .def(py::init([]() { return new Example(); }))
    // Two callbacks:
    .def(py::init([]() { return new Example(); } /* no alias needed */,
                  []() { return new PyExample(); } /* alias needed */))
    // *Always* returns an alias instance (like py::init_alias<>())
    .def(py::init([]() { return new PyExample(); }))
    ;

Brace initialization

pybind11::init<> internally uses C++11 brace initialization to call the constructor of the target class. This means that it can be used to bind implicit constructors as well:

struct Aggregate {
    int a;
    std::string b;
};

py::class_<Aggregate>(m, "Aggregate")
    .def(py::init<int, const std::string &>());

Note

Note that brace initialization preferentially invokes constructor overloads taking a std::initializer_list. In the rare event that this causes an issue, you can work around it by using py::init(...) with a lambda function that constructs the new object as desired.

Non-public destructors

If a class has a private or protected destructor (as might e.g. be the case in a singleton pattern), a compile error will occur when creating bindings via pybind11. The underlying issue is that the std::unique_ptr holder type that is responsible for managing the lifetime of instances will reference the destructor even if no deallocations ever take place. In order to expose classes with private or protected destructors, it is possible to override the holder type via a holder type argument to class_. Pybind11 provides a helper class py::nodelete that disables any destructor invocations. In this case, it is crucial that instances are deallocated on the C++ side to avoid memory leaks.

/* ... definition ... */

class MyClass {
private:
    ~MyClass() { }
};

/* ... binding code ... */

py::class_<MyClass, std::unique_ptr<MyClass, py::nodelete>>(m, "MyClass")
    .def(py::init<>())

Destructors that call Python

If a Python function is invoked from a C++ destructor, an exception may be thrown of type error_already_set. If this error is thrown out of a class destructor, std::terminate() will be called, terminating the process. Class destructors must catch all exceptions of type error_already_set to discard the Python exception using error_already_set::discard_as_unraisable().

Every Python function should be treated as possibly throwing. When a Python generator stops yielding items, Python will throw a StopIteration exception, which can pass though C++ destructors if the generator’s stack frame holds the last reference to C++ objects.

For more information, see the documentation on exceptions.

class MyClass {
public:
    ~MyClass() {
        try {
            py::print("Even printing is dangerous in a destructor");
            py::exec("raise ValueError('This is an unraisable exception')");
        } catch (py::error_already_set &e) {
            // error_context should be information about where/why the occurred,
            // e.g. use __func__ to get the name of the current function
            e.discard_as_unraisable(__func__);
        }
    }
};

Note

pybind11 does not support C++ destructors marked noexcept(false).

New in version 2.6.

Implicit conversions

Suppose that instances of two types A and B are used in a project, and that an A can easily be converted into an instance of type B (examples of this could be a fixed and an arbitrary precision number type).

py::class_<A>(m, "A")
    /// ... members ...

py::class_<B>(m, "B")
    .def(py::init<A>())
    /// ... members ...

m.def("func",
    [](const B &) { /* .... */ }
);

To invoke the function func using a variable a containing an A instance, we’d have to write func(B(a)) in Python. On the other hand, C++ will automatically apply an implicit type conversion, which makes it possible to directly write func(a).

In this situation (i.e. where B has a constructor that converts from A), the following statement enables similar implicit conversions on the Python side:

py::implicitly_convertible<A, B>();

Note

Implicit conversions from A to B only work when B is a custom data type that is exposed to Python via pybind11.

To prevent runaway recursion, implicit conversions are non-reentrant: an implicit conversion invoked as part of another implicit conversion of the same type (i.e. from A to B) will fail.

Static properties

The section on Instance and static fields discussed the creation of instance properties that are implemented in terms of C++ getters and setters.

Static properties can also be created in a similar way to expose getters and setters of static class attributes. Note that the implicit self argument also exists in this case and is used to pass the Python type subclass instance. This parameter will often not be needed by the C++ side, and the following example illustrates how to instantiate a lambda getter function that ignores it:

py::class_<Foo>(m, "Foo")
    .def_property_readonly_static("foo", [](py::object /* self */) { return Foo(); });

Operator overloading

Suppose that we’re given the following Vector2 class with a vector addition and scalar multiplication operation, all implemented using overloaded operators in C++.

class Vector2 {
public:
    Vector2(float x, float y) : x(x), y(y) { }

    Vector2 operator+(const Vector2 &v) const { return Vector2(x + v.x, y + v.y); }
    Vector2 operator*(float value) const { return Vector2(x * value, y * value); }
    Vector2& operator+=(const Vector2 &v) { x += v.x; y += v.y; return *this; }
    Vector2& operator*=(float v) { x *= v; y *= v; return *this; }

    friend Vector2 operator*(float f, const Vector2 &v) {
        return Vector2(f * v.x, f * v.y);
    }

    std::string toString() const {
        return "[" + std::to_string(x) + ", " + std::to_string(y) + "]";
    }
private:
    float x, y;
};

The following snippet shows how the above operators can be conveniently exposed to Python.

#include <pybind11/operators.h>

PYBIND11_MODULE(example, m) {
    py::class_<Vector2>(m, "Vector2")
        .def(py::init<float, float>())
        .def(py::self + py::self)
        .def(py::self += py::self)
        .def(py::self *= float())
        .def(float() * py::self)
        .def(py::self * float())
        .def(-py::self)
        .def("__repr__", &Vector2::toString);
}

Note that a line like

.def(py::self * float())

is really just short hand notation for

.def("__mul__", [](const Vector2 &a, float b) {
    return a * b;
}, py::is_operator())

This can be useful for exposing additional operators that don’t exist on the C++ side, or to perform other types of customization. The py::is_operator flag marker is needed to inform pybind11 that this is an operator, which returns NotImplemented when invoked with incompatible arguments rather than throwing a type error.

Note

To use the more convenient py::self notation, the additional header file pybind11/operators.h must be included.

See also

The file tests/test_operator_overloading.cpp contains a complete example that demonstrates how to work with overloaded operators in more detail.

Pickling support

Python’s pickle module provides a powerful facility to serialize and de-serialize a Python object graph into a binary data stream. To pickle and unpickle C++ classes using pybind11, a py::pickle() definition must be provided. Suppose the class in question has the following signature:

class Pickleable {
public:
    Pickleable(const std::string &value) : m_value(value) { }
    const std::string &value() const { return m_value; }

    void setExtra(int extra) { m_extra = extra; }
    int extra() const { return m_extra; }
private:
    std::string m_value;
    int m_extra = 0;
};

Pickling support in Python is enabled by defining the __setstate__ and __getstate__ methods 1. For pybind11 classes, use py::pickle() to bind these two functions:

py::class_<Pickleable>(m, "Pickleable")
    .def(py::init<std::string>())
    .def("value", &Pickleable::value)
    .def("extra", &Pickleable::extra)
    .def("setExtra", &Pickleable::setExtra)
    .def(py::pickle(
        [](const Pickleable &p) { // __getstate__
            /* Return a tuple that fully encodes the state of the object */
            return py::make_tuple(p.value(), p.extra());
        },
        [](py::tuple t) { // __setstate__
            if (t.size() != 2)
                throw std::runtime_error("Invalid state!");

            /* Create a new C++ instance */
            Pickleable p(t[0].cast<std::string>());

            /* Assign any additional state */
            p.setExtra(t[1].cast<int>());

            return p;
        }
    ));

The __setstate__ part of the py::pickle() definition follows the same rules as the single-argument version of py::init(). The return type can be a value, pointer or holder type. See Custom constructors for details.

An instance can now be pickled as follows:

import pickle

p = Pickleable("test_value")
p.setExtra(15)
data = pickle.dumps(p)

Note

If given, the second argument to dumps must be 2 or larger - 0 and 1 are not supported. Newer versions are also fine; for instance, specify -1 to always use the latest available version. Beware: failure to follow these instructions will cause important pybind11 memory allocation routines to be skipped during unpickling, which will likely lead to memory corruption and/or segmentation faults. Python defaults to version 3 (Python 3-3.7) and version 4 for Python 3.8+.

See also

The file tests/test_pickling.cpp contains a complete example that demonstrates how to pickle and unpickle types using pybind11 in more detail.

1

http://docs.python.org/3/library/pickle.html#pickling-class-instances

Deepcopy support

Python normally uses references in assignments. Sometimes a real copy is needed to prevent changing all copies. The copy module 2 provides these capabilities.

A class with pickle support is automatically also (deep)copy compatible. However, performance can be improved by adding custom __copy__ and __deepcopy__ methods.

For simple classes (deep)copy can be enabled by using the copy constructor, which should look as follows:

py::class_<Copyable>(m, "Copyable")
    .def("__copy__",  [](const Copyable &self) {
        return Copyable(self);
    })
    .def("__deepcopy__", [](const Copyable &self, py::dict) {
        return Copyable(self);
    }, "memo"_a);

Note

Dynamic attributes will not be copied in this example.

2

https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html

Multiple Inheritance

pybind11 can create bindings for types that derive from multiple base types (aka. multiple inheritance). To do so, specify all bases in the template arguments of the class_ declaration:

py::class_<MyType, BaseType1, BaseType2, BaseType3>(m, "MyType")
   ...

The base types can be specified in arbitrary order, and they can even be interspersed with alias types and holder types (discussed earlier in this document)—pybind11 will automatically find out which is which. The only requirement is that the first template argument is the type to be declared.

It is also permitted to inherit multiply from exported C++ classes in Python, as well as inheriting from multiple Python and/or pybind11-exported classes.

There is one caveat regarding the implementation of this feature:

When only one base type is specified for a C++ type that actually has multiple bases, pybind11 will assume that it does not participate in multiple inheritance, which can lead to undefined behavior. In such cases, add the tag multiple_inheritance to the class constructor:

py::class_<MyType, BaseType2>(m, "MyType", py::multiple_inheritance());

The tag is redundant and does not need to be specified when multiple base types are listed.

Module-local class bindings

When creating a binding for a class, pybind11 by default makes that binding “global” across modules. What this means is that a type defined in one module can be returned from any module resulting in the same Python type. For example, this allows the following:

// In the module1.cpp binding code for module1:
py::class_<Pet>(m, "Pet")
    .def(py::init<std::string>())
    .def_readonly("name", &Pet::name);
// In the module2.cpp binding code for module2:
m.def("create_pet", [](std::string name) { return new Pet(name); });
>>> from module1 import Pet
>>> from module2 import create_pet
>>> pet1 = Pet("Kitty")
>>> pet2 = create_pet("Doggy")
>>> pet2.name()
'Doggy'

When writing binding code for a library, this is usually desirable: this allows, for example, splitting up a complex library into multiple Python modules.

In some cases, however, this can cause conflicts. For example, suppose two unrelated modules make use of an external C++ library and each provide custom bindings for one of that library’s classes. This will result in an error when a Python program attempts to import both modules (directly or indirectly) because of conflicting definitions on the external type:

// dogs.cpp

// Binding for external library class:
py::class<pets::Pet>(m, "Pet")
    .def("name", &pets::Pet::name);

// Binding for local extension class:
py::class<Dog, pets::Pet>(m, "Dog")
    .def(py::init<std::string>());
// cats.cpp, in a completely separate project from the above dogs.cpp.

// Binding for external library class:
py::class<pets::Pet>(m, "Pet")
    .def("get_name", &pets::Pet::name);

// Binding for local extending class:
py::class<Cat, pets::Pet>(m, "Cat")
    .def(py::init<std::string>());
>>> import cats
>>> import dogs
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ImportError: generic_type: type "Pet" is already registered!

To get around this, you can tell pybind11 to keep the external class binding localized to the module by passing the py::module_local() attribute into the py::class_ constructor:

// Pet binding in dogs.cpp:
py::class<pets::Pet>(m, "Pet", py::module_local())
    .def("name", &pets::Pet::name);
// Pet binding in cats.cpp:
py::class<pets::Pet>(m, "Pet", py::module_local())
    .def("get_name", &pets::Pet::name);

This makes the Python-side dogs.Pet and cats.Pet into distinct classes, avoiding the conflict and allowing both modules to be loaded. C++ code in the dogs module that casts or returns a Pet instance will result in a dogs.Pet Python instance, while C++ code in the cats module will result in a cats.Pet Python instance.

This does come with two caveats, however: First, external modules cannot return or cast a Pet instance to Python (unless they also provide their own local bindings). Second, from the Python point of view they are two distinct classes.

Note that the locality only applies in the C++ -> Python direction. When passing such a py::module_local type into a C++ function, the module-local classes are still considered. This means that if the following function is added to any module (including but not limited to the cats and dogs modules above) it will be callable with either a dogs.Pet or cats.Pet argument:

m.def("pet_name", [](const pets::Pet &pet) { return pet.name(); });

For example, suppose the above function is added to each of cats.cpp, dogs.cpp and frogs.cpp (where frogs.cpp is some other module that does not bind Pets at all).

>>> import cats, dogs, frogs  # No error because of the added py::module_local()
>>> mycat, mydog = cats.Cat("Fluffy"), dogs.Dog("Rover")
>>> (cats.pet_name(mycat), dogs.pet_name(mydog))
('Fluffy', 'Rover')
>>> (cats.pet_name(mydog), dogs.pet_name(mycat), frogs.pet_name(mycat))
('Rover', 'Fluffy', 'Fluffy')

It is possible to use py::module_local() registrations in one module even if another module registers the same type globally: within the module with the module-local definition, all C++ instances will be cast to the associated bound Python type. In other modules any such values are converted to the global Python type created elsewhere.

Note

STL bindings (as provided via the optional pybind11/stl_bind.h header) apply py::module_local by default when the bound type might conflict with other modules; see Binding STL containers for details.

Note

The localization of the bound types is actually tied to the shared object or binary generated by the compiler/linker. For typical modules created with PYBIND11_MODULE(), this distinction is not significant. It is possible, however, when Embedding the interpreter to embed multiple modules in the same binary (see Adding embedded modules). In such a case, the localization will apply across all embedded modules within the same binary.

See also

The file tests/test_local_bindings.cpp contains additional examples that demonstrate how py::module_local() works.

Binding protected member functions

It’s normally not possible to expose protected member functions to Python:

class A {
protected:
    int foo() const { return 42; }
};

py::class_<A>(m, "A")
    .def("foo", &A::foo); // error: 'foo' is a protected member of 'A'

On one hand, this is good because non-public members aren’t meant to be accessed from the outside. But we may want to make use of protected functions in derived Python classes.

The following pattern makes this possible:

class A {
protected:
    int foo() const { return 42; }
};

class Publicist : public A { // helper type for exposing protected functions
public:
    using A::foo; // inherited with different access modifier
};

py::class_<A>(m, "A") // bind the primary class
    .def("foo", &Publicist::foo); // expose protected methods via the publicist

This works because &Publicist::foo is exactly the same function as &A::foo (same signature and address), just with a different access modifier. The only purpose of the Publicist helper class is to make the function name public.

If the intent is to expose protected virtual functions which can be overridden in Python, the publicist pattern can be combined with the previously described trampoline:

class A {
public:
    virtual ~A() = default;

protected:
    virtual int foo() const { return 42; }
};

class Trampoline : public A {
public:
    int foo() const override { PYBIND11_OVERRIDE(int, A, foo, ); }
};

class Publicist : public A {
public:
    using A::foo;
};

py::class_<A, Trampoline>(m, "A") // <-- `Trampoline` here
    .def("foo", &Publicist::foo); // <-- `Publicist` here, not `Trampoline`!

Binding final classes

Some classes may not be appropriate to inherit from. In C++11, classes can use the final specifier to ensure that a class cannot be inherited from. The py::is_final attribute can be used to ensure that Python classes cannot inherit from a specified type. The underlying C++ type does not need to be declared final.

class IsFinal final {};

py::class_<IsFinal>(m, "IsFinal", py::is_final());

When you try to inherit from such a class in Python, you will now get this error:

>>> class PyFinalChild(IsFinal):
...     pass
...
TypeError: type 'IsFinal' is not an acceptable base type

Note

This attribute is currently ignored on PyPy

New in version 2.6.

Binding classes with template parameters

pybind11 can also wrap classes that have template parameters. Consider these classes:

struct Cat {};
struct Dog {};

template <typename PetType>
struct Cage {
    Cage(PetType& pet);
    PetType& get();
};

C++ templates may only be instantiated at compile time, so pybind11 can only wrap instantiated templated classes. You cannot wrap a non-instantiated template:

// BROKEN (this will not compile)
py::class_<Cage>(m, "Cage");
    .def("get", &Cage::get);

You must explicitly specify each template/type combination that you want to wrap separately.

// ok
py::class_<Cage<Cat>>(m, "CatCage")
    .def("get", &Cage<Cat>::get);

// ok
py::class_<Cage<Dog>>(m, "DogCage")
    .def("get", &Cage<Dog>::get);

If your class methods have template parameters you can wrap those as well, but once again each instantiation must be explicitly specified:

typename <typename T>
struct MyClass {
    template <typename V>
    T fn(V v);
};

py::class<MyClass<int>>(m, "MyClassT")
    .def("fn", &MyClass<int>::fn<std::string>);

Custom automatic downcasters

As explained in Inheritance and automatic downcasting, pybind11 comes with built-in understanding of the dynamic type of polymorphic objects in C++; that is, returning a Pet to Python produces a Python object that knows it’s wrapping a Dog, if Pet has virtual methods and pybind11 knows about Dog and this Pet is in fact a Dog. Sometimes, you might want to provide this automatic downcasting behavior when creating bindings for a class hierarchy that does not use standard C++ polymorphism, such as LLVM 3. As long as there’s some way to determine at runtime whether a downcast is safe, you can proceed by specializing the pybind11::polymorphic_type_hook template:

enum class PetKind { Cat, Dog, Zebra };
struct Pet {   // Not polymorphic: has no virtual methods
    const PetKind kind;
    int age = 0;
  protected:
    Pet(PetKind _kind) : kind(_kind) {}
};
struct Dog : Pet {
    Dog() : Pet(PetKind::Dog) {}
    std::string sound = "woof!";
    std::string bark() const { return sound; }
};

namespace PYBIND11_NAMESPACE {
    template<> struct polymorphic_type_hook<Pet> {
        static const void *get(const Pet *src, const std::type_info*& type) {
            // note that src may be nullptr
            if (src && src->kind == PetKind::Dog) {
                type = &typeid(Dog);
                return static_cast<const Dog*>(src);
            }
            return src;
        }
    };
} // namespace PYBIND11_NAMESPACE

When pybind11 wants to convert a C++ pointer of type Base* to a Python object, it calls polymorphic_type_hook<Base>::get() to determine if a downcast is possible. The get() function should use whatever runtime information is available to determine if its src parameter is in fact an instance of some class Derived that inherits from Base. If it finds such a Derived, it sets type = &typeid(Derived) and returns a pointer to the Derived object that contains src. Otherwise, it just returns src, leaving type at its default value of nullptr. If you set type to a type that pybind11 doesn’t know about, no downcasting will occur, and the original src pointer will be used with its static type Base*.

It is critical that the returned pointer and type argument of get() agree with each other: if type is set to something non-null, the returned pointer must point to the start of an object whose type is type. If the hierarchy being exposed uses only single inheritance, a simple return src; will achieve this just fine, but in the general case, you must cast src to the appropriate derived-class pointer (e.g. using static_cast<Derived>(src)) before allowing it to be returned as a void*.

3

https://llvm.org/docs/HowToSetUpLLVMStyleRTTI.html

Note

pybind11’s standard support for downcasting objects whose types have virtual methods is implemented using polymorphic_type_hook too, using the standard C++ ability to determine the most-derived type of a polymorphic object using typeid() and to cast a base pointer to that most-derived type (even if you don’t know what it is) using dynamic_cast<void*>.

See also

The file tests/test_tagbased_polymorphic.cpp contains a more complete example, including a demonstration of how to provide automatic downcasting for an entire class hierarchy without writing one get() function for each class.

Accessing the type object

You can get the type object from a C++ class that has already been registered using:

py::type T_py = py::type::of<T>();

You can directly use py::type::of(ob) to get the type object from any python object, just like type(ob) in Python.

Note

Other types, like py::type::of<int>(), do not work, see Type conversions.

New in version 2.6.

Custom type setup

For advanced use cases, such as enabling garbage collection support, you may wish to directly manipulate the PyHeapTypeObject corresponding to a py::class_ definition.

You can do that using py::custom_type_setup:

struct OwnsPythonObjects {
    py::object value = py::none();
};
py::class_<OwnsPythonObjects> cls(
    m, "OwnsPythonObjects", py::custom_type_setup([](PyHeapTypeObject *heap_type) {
        auto *type = &heap_type->ht_type;
        type->tp_flags |= Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_GC;
        type->tp_traverse = [](PyObject *self_base, visitproc visit, void *arg) {
            auto &self = py::cast<OwnsPythonObjects&>(py::handle(self_base));
            Py_VISIT(self.value.ptr());
            return 0;
        };
        type->tp_clear = [](PyObject *self_base) {
            auto &self = py::cast<OwnsPythonObjects&>(py::handle(self_base));
            self.value = py::none();
            return 0;
        };
    }));
cls.def(py::init<>());
cls.def_readwrite("value", &OwnsPythonObjects::value);

New in version 2.8.