PyOtherSide Developer Guide¶
PyOtherSide is a QML Plugin for Qt 5 and Qt 6 that provides access to a Python 3 interpreter from QML. It was designed with mobile devices in mind, where high-framerate touch interfaces are common, and where the user usually interfaces only with one application at a time via a touchscreen. As such, it is important to never block the UI thread, so that the user can always continue to use the interface, even when the backend is processing, downloading or calculating something in the background.
At its core, PyOtherSide is basically a simple layer that converts Qt (QML) objects to Python objects and vice versa, with focus on asynchronous events and continuation-passing style function calls.
Qt 6 Support¶
New in version 1.6.0.
PyOtherSide now supports Qt 6 while retaining source compatibility with Qt 5.
The following restrictions currently apply when using Qt 6:
PyGLArea
is currently broken with Qt 6, usePyFBO
instead.
QML API¶
This section describes the QML API exposed by the PyOtherSide QML Plugin.
Import Versions¶
The current QML API version of PyOtherSide is 1.5. When new features are introduced, or behavior is changed, the API version will be bumped and documented here.
io.thp.pyotherside 1.0¶
Initial API release.
io.thp.pyotherside 1.2¶
importModule()
now behaves like theimport
statement in Python for names with dots. This means thatimportModule('x.y.z', ...)
now works likeimport x.y.z
in Python.If a JavaScript exception occurs in the callback passed to
importModule()
orcall()
, the signalerror()
is emitted with the exception information (filename, line, message) astraceback
.
io.thp.pyotherside 1.3¶
addImportPath()
now also acceptsqrc:/
URLs. This is useful if your Python files are embedded as Qt Resources, relative to your QML files (useQt.resolvedUrl()
from the QML file).
io.thp.pyotherside 1.4¶
Added
getattr()
call()
andcall_sync()
now accept a Python callable object for the first parameter (previously, only strings were supported)If
error()
doesn’t have a handler defined, error messages will be printed to the console as warnings
io.thp.pyotherside 1.5¶
Added
PyGLArea
andPyFBO
for OpenGL rendering, see OpenGL rendering in PythonAdded
importNames()
andimportNames_sync()
to mirror Python’sfrom foo import bar, baz
import mechanism
QML Python
Element¶
The Python
element exposes a Python interpreter in a QML file. In
PyOtherSide 1.0, if multiple Python elements are instantiated, they will share
the same underlying Python interpreter, so Python module-global state will be
shared between all Python elements.
To use the Python
element in a QML file, you have to import the plugin using:
import io.thp.pyotherside 1.5
Signals¶
- received(var data)¶
Default event handler for
pyotherside.send()
if no other event handler was set.
- error(string traceback)¶
Error handler for errors from Python.
Changed in version 1.4.0: If the error signal is not connected, PyOtherSide will print the error as QWarning on the console (previously, error messages were only shown if the signal was connected and printed there). To avoid printing the error, just define a no-op handler.
Methods¶
To configure event handlers for events from Python, you can use
the setHandler()
method:
- setHandler(string event, callable callback)¶
Set the handler for events sent with
pyotherside.send()
.
Importing modules is then done by optionally adding an import path and then importing the module asynchronously:
- addImportPath(string path)¶
Add a path to Python’s
sys.path
.
Changed in version 1.1.0: addImportPath()
will automatically strip a leading
file://
from the path, so you can use Qt.resolvedUrl()
without having to manually strip the leading file://
in QML.
Changed in version 1.3.0: Starting with QML API version 1.3 (import io.thp.pyotherside 1.3
),
addImportPath()
now also accepts qrc:/
URLs. The first time
a qrc:/
path is added, a new import handler will be installed,
which will enable Python to transparently import modules from it.
- importModule(string name, function callback(success) {})¶
Import a Python module.
Changed in version 1.2.0: Previously, this function didn’t work correctly for importing
modules with dots in their name. Starting with the API version 1.2
(import io.thp.pyotherside 1.2
), this behavior is now fixed,
and importModule('x.y.z', ...)
behaves like import x.y.z
.
Changed in version 1.2.0: If a JavaScript exception occurs in the callback, the error()
signal is emitted with traceback
containing the exception info
(QML API version 1.2 and newer).
- importNames(string module, array object_names, function callback(success) {})¶
Import a list of names from a given modules, like Python’s
from foo import bar, baz
syntax – the equivalent call would beimportNames('module', ['bar', 'baz'], ...);
New in version 1.5.0.
Once modules are imported, Python function can be called on the imported modules using:
- call(var func, args=[], function callback(result) {})¶
Call the Python function
func
withargs
asynchronously. Ifargs
is omitted,func
will be called without arguments. Ifcallback
is a callable, it will be called with the Python function result as single argument when the call has succeeded.
Changed in version 1.2.0: If a JavaScript exception occurs in the callback, the error()
signal is emitted with traceback
containing the exception info
(QML API version 1.2 and newer).
Changed in version 1.4.0: func
can also be a Python callable object, not just a string.
Attributes on Python objects can be accessed using getattr()
:
- getattr(obj, string attr) var ¶
Get the attribute
attr
of the Python objectobj
.
New in version 1.4.0.
For some of these methods, there also exist synchronous variants, but it is highly recommended to use the asynchronous variants instead to avoid blocking the QML UI thread:
- evaluate(string expr) var ¶
Evaluate a Python expression synchronously.
- importModule_sync(string name) bool ¶
Import a Python module. Returns
true
on success,false
otherwise.
- importNames_sync(string module, array names) bool ¶
Import names from a Python modules. Returns
true
on success,false
otherwise.
- call_sync(var func, var args=[]) var ¶
Call a Python function. Returns the return value of the Python function.
Changed in version 1.4.0: func
can also be a Python callable object, not just a string.
The following functions allow access to the version of the running PyOtherSide plugin and Python interpreter.
- pluginVersion() string ¶
Get the version of the PyOtherSide plugin that is currently used.
Note
This is not necessarily the same as the QML API version currently in use.
The QML API version is decided by the QML import statement, so even if
pluginVersion()
returns 1.2.0, if the plugin has been imported as
import io.thp.pyotherside 1.0
, the API version used would be 1.0.
New in version 1.1.0.
- pythonVersion() string ¶
Get the version of the Python interpreter that is currently used.
New in version 1.1.0.
Changed in version 1.5.0: Previously, pythonVersion()
returned the compile-time version of
Python against which PyOtherSide was built. Starting with version 1.5.0,
the run-time version of Python is returned (e.g. PyOtherSide compiled
against Python 3.4.0 and running with Python 3.4.1 returned “3.4.0”
before, but returns “3.4.1” in PyOtherSide after and including 1.5.0).
QML PyGLArea
Element¶
New in version 1.5.0.
The PyGLArea allows rendering arbitrary OpenGL content from Python into the QML scene.
Properties¶
- PyObject renderer
Python object that implements the IRenderer interface, see OpenGL rendering in Python for details.
- bool before
true
to render before (= below) the rest of the QML scene,false
to render after (= above) the rest of the QML scene. Default:true
QML PyFBO
Element¶
New in version 1.5.0.
The PyFBO allows offscreen rendering of arbitrary OpenGL content from Python into the QML scene.
Properties¶
- PyObject renderer
Python object that implements the IRenderer interface, see OpenGL rendering in Python for details
Python API¶
PyOtherSide uses a normal Python 3.x interpreter for running your Python code.
The pyotherside
module¶
When a module is imported in PyOtherSide, it will have access to a special
module called pyotherside
in addition to all Python Standard Library modules
and Python modules in sys.path
:
import pyotherside
The module can be used to send events asynchronously (even from different threads) to the QML layer, register a callback for doing clean-ups at application exit and integrate with other QML-specific features of PyOtherSide.
Methods¶
- pyotherside.send(event, \*args)¶
Send an asynchronous event with name
event
with optional argumentsargs
to QML.
- pyotherside.atexit(callback)¶
Register a
callback
to be called when the application is closing.
- pyotherside.set_image_provider(provider)¶
Set the QML image provider (
image://python/
).
New in version 1.1.0.
- pyotherside.qrc_is_file(filename)¶
Check if
filename
is an existing file in the Qt Resource System.- Returns
True
iffilename
is a file,False
otherwise.
New in version 1.3.0.
- pyotherside.qrc_is_dir(dirname)¶
Check if
dirname
is an existing directory in the Qt Resource System.- Returns
True
ifdirname
is a directory,False
otherwise.
New in version 1.3.0.
- pyotherside.qrc_get_file_contents(filename)¶
Get the file contents of a file in the Qt Resource System.
- Raises
ValueError – If
filename
does not denote a valid file.- Returns
The file contents as Python
bytearray
object.
New in version 1.3.0.
- pyotherside.qrc_list_dir(dirname)¶
Get the entry list of a directory in the Qt Resource System.
- Raises
ValueError – If
dirname
does not denote a valid directory.- Returns
The directory entries as list of strings.
New in version 1.3.0.
Constants¶
New in version 1.1.0.
These constants are used in the return value of a image provider function:
- pyotherside.format_mono
Mono pixel format (
QImage::Format_Mono
).- pyotherside.format_mono_lsb
Mono pixel format, LSB alignment (
QImage::Format_MonoLSB
).- pyotherside.format_rgb32
32-bit RGB format (
QImage::Format_RGB32
).- pyotherside.format_argb32
32-bit ARGB format (
QImage::Format_ARGB32
).- pyotherside.format_rgb16
16-bit RGB format (
QImage::Format_RGB16
).- pyotherside.format_rgb666
18bpp RGB666 format (
QImage::Format_RGB666
).- pyotherside.format_rgb555
15bpp RGB555 format (
QImage::Format_RGB555
).- pyotherside.format_rgb888
24-bit RGB format (
QImage::Format_RGB888
).- pyotherside.format_rgb444
12bpp RGB format (
QImage::Format_RGB444
).- pyotherside.format_data
Encoded image file data (e.g. PNG/JPEG data).
New in version 1.3.0.
The following constants have been added in PyOtherSide 1.3:
- pyotherside.version
Version of PyOtherSide as string.
New in version 1.5.0.
The following constants have been added in PyOtherSide 1.5:
- pyotherside.format_svg_data
SVG image XML data
Data Type Mapping¶
PyOtherSide will automatically convert Python data types to Qt data types (which in turn will be converted to QML data types by the QML engine). The following data types are supported and can be used to pass data between Python and QML (and vice versa):
Python |
QML |
Remarks |
---|---|---|
bool |
bool |
|
int |
int |
|
float |
double |
|
str |
string |
|
list |
JS Array |
JS Arrays are always converted to Python lists. |
tuple |
JS Array |
|
dict |
JS Object |
Keys must be strings |
datetime.date |
QML date |
since PyOtherSide 1.2.0 |
datetime.time |
QML time |
since PyOtherSide 1.2.0 |
datetime.datetime |
JS Date |
since PyOtherSide 1.2.0 |
set |
JS Array |
since PyOtherSide 1.3.0 |
iterable |
JS Array |
since PyOtherSide 1.3.0 |
object |
(opaque) |
since PyOtherSide 1.4.0 |
pyotherside.QObject |
QObject |
since PyOtherSide 1.4.0 |
bytes |
JS ArrayBuffer |
since PyOtherSide 1.5.6; requires Qt 5.8; the C++ data type is QByteArray |
Trying to pass in other types than the ones listed here is undefined behavior and will usually result in an error.
Image Provider¶
New in version 1.1.0.
A QML Image Provider can be registered from Python to load image
data (e.g. map tiles, diagrams, graphs or generated images) in
QML Image
elements without resorting to saving/loading files.
An image provider has the following argument list and return values:
def image_provider(image_id, requested_size):
...
return bytearray(pixels), (width, height), format
The parameters to the image provider functions are:
- image_id
The ID of the image URL (
image://python/<image_id>
).- requested_size
The source size of the QML
Image
as tuple:(width, height)
.(-1, -1)
if the source size is not set.
The image provider must return a tuple (data, size, format)
:
- data
A
bytearray
object containing the pixel data for the given size and the given format.- size
A tuple
(width, height)
describing the size of the pixel data in pixels.- format
The pixel format of
data
(see constants),pyotherside.format_data
ifdata
contains an encoded (PNG/JPEG) image instead of raw pixel data orpyotherside.format_svg_data
ifdata
contains SVG image XML data.
In order to register the image provider with PyOtherSide for use
as provider for image://python/
URLs, the image provider function
needs to be passed to PyOtherSide:
import pyotherside
def image_provider(image_id, requested_size):
...
pyotherside.set_image_provider(image_provider)
Because Python modules are usually imported asynchronously, the image
provider will only be registered once the module registering the image
provider is successfully imported. You have to make sure that setting
the source
property on a QML Image
element only happens after
the image provider has been set (e.g. by setting the source
property
in the callback function passed to importModule()
).
Qt Resource Access¶
New in version 1.3.0.
If you are using PyOtherSide in combination with an application binary compiled from C++ code with Qt Resources (see Qt Resource System), you can inspect and access the resources from Python. This example demonstrates the API by walking the whole resource tree, printing out directory names and file sizes:
import pyotherside
import os.path
def walk(root):
for entry in pyotherside.qrc_list_dir(root):
name = os.path.join(root, entry)
if pyotherside.qrc_is_dir(name):
print('Directory:', name)
walk(name)
else:
data = pyotherside.qrc_get_file_contents(name)
print('File:', name, 'has', len(data), 'bytes')
walk('/')
Importing Python modules from Qt Resources also works starting with QML API 1.3
using Qt.resolvedUrl()
from within a QML file in Qt Resources. As an
alternative, addImportPath('qrc:/')
will add the root directory of the Qt
Resources to Python’s module search path.
Accessing QObjects from Python¶
New in version 1.4.0.
Since version 1.4, PyOtherSide allows passing QObjects from QML to Python, and accessing (setting / getting) properties and calling slots and dynamic methods. References to QObjects passed to Python can be passed back to QML transparently:
# Assume func will be called with a QObject as sole argument
def func(qobject):
# Getting properties
print(qobject.x)
# Setting properties
qobject.x = 123
# Calling slots and dynamic functions
print(qobject.someFunction(123, 'b'))
# Returning a QObject reference to the caller
return qobject
It is possible to store a reference (bound method) to a method of a QObject. Such references cannot be passed to QML, and can only be used in Python for the lifetime of the QObject. If you need to pass such a bound method to QML, you can wrap it into a Python object (or even just a lambda) and pass that instead:
def func(qobject):
# Can store a reference to a bound method
bound_method = qobject.someFunction
# Calling the bound method
bound_method(123, 'b')
# If you need to return the bound method, you must wrap it
# in a lambda (or any other Python object), the bound method
# cannot be returned as-is for now
return lambda a, b: bound_method(a, b)
It’s not possible to instantiate new QObjects from within Python, and it’s not possible to subclass QObject from within Python. Also, be aware that a reference to a QObject in Python will become invalid when the QObject is deleted (there’s no way for PyOtherSide to prevent referenced QObjects from being deleted, but PyOtherSide tries hard to detect the deletion of objects and give meaningful error messages in case the reference is accessed).
Calling signals of QML objects¶
New in version 1.5.4.
Calling (emitting) signals of QML objects is supported since PyOtherSide 1.5.4. However, as signals do not have a return value as such, the return value is either just true or false, depending on whether the call worked or not.
OpenGL rendering in Python¶
New in version 1.5.0.
You can render directly to a QML application’s OpenGL context in your Python
code (i.e. via PyOpenGL or vispy.gloo) by using a PyGLArea
or PyFBO
item.
The IRenderer
interface that needs to be implemented in Python and set
as the renderer
property of PyGLArea
or PyFBO
needs to provide
the following functions:
- IRenderer.init()¶
Initialize OpenGL resources required for rendering. This method is optional.
- IRenderer.reshape(x, y, width, height)¶
Called when the geometry has changed.
(x, y)
is the position of the bottom left corner of the area, in window coordinates, e.g. (0, 0) is the bottom left corner of the window.
- IRenderer.render()¶
Render to the OpenGL context.
It is the renderer’s responsibility to unbind any used resources to leave the context in a clean state.
- IRenderer.cleanup()¶
Free any resources allocated by
IRenderer.init()
. This method is optional.
See Rendering with PyOpenGL for an example implementation.
Note that you might to use a recent version of PyOpenGL (>= 3.1.0) for some of
the examples to work, earlier versions had problems. If your distribution does
not provide new versions, you can install the most recent version of PyOpenGL
to your $HOME
using:
pip3 install --user --upgrade PyOpenGL PyOpenGL_accelerate
Cookbook¶
This section contains code examples and best practices for combining Python and QML.
Importing modules and calling functions asynchronously¶
In this example, we import the Python Standard Library module os
and - when the module is imported - call the os.getcwd()
function on it.
The result of the os.getcwd()
function is then printed to the console
and os.chdir()
is called with a single argument ('/'
) - again, after
the os.chdir()
function has returned, a message will be printed.
In this example, importing modules and calling functions are both done in
an asynchronous way - the QML/GUI thread will not block while these functions
execute. In fact, the Component.onCompleted
code block will probably
finish before the os
module has been imported in Python.
Python {
Component.onCompleted: {
importModule('os', function() {
call('os.getcwd', [], function (result) {
console.log('Working directory: ' + result);
call('os.chdir', ['/'], function (result) {
console.log('Working directory changed.');
}););
});
});
}
}
While this continuation-passing style might look a like a little pyramid due all the nesting and indentation at first, it makes sure your application’s UI is always responsive. The user will be able to interact with the GUI (e.g. scroll and move around in the UI) while the Python code can process requests.
To avoid what’s called callback hell in JavaScript, you can pull out the anonymous functions you give as callbacks, give them names and pass them to the API functions via name, e.g. the above example would turn into a shallow structure (of course, in this example, splitting everything out does not make too much sense, as the functions are very simple to begin with, but it’s here to demonstrate how splitting a callback hell pyramid basically works):
Python {
Component.onCompleted: {
function changedCwd(result) {
console.log('Working directory changed.');
}
function gotCwd(result) {
console.log('Working directory: ' + result);
call('os.chdir', ['/'], changedCwd);
}
function withOs() {
call('os.getcwd', [], gotCwd);
}
importModule('os', withOs);
}
}
Evaluating Python expressions in QML¶
The evaluate()
method on the Python
object can be used to evaluate a
simple Python expression and return its result as JavaScript object:
Python {
Component.onCompleted: {
console.log('Squares: ' + evaluate('[x for x in range(10)]'));
}
}
Evaluating expressions is done synchronously, so make sure you only use it for expressions that are not long-running calculations / operations.
Error handling in QML¶
If an error happens in Python while calling functions, the traceback of the
error (or an error message in case the error happens in the PyOtherSide layer)
will be sent with the error()
signal of the Python
element. During early
development, it’s probably enough to just log the error to the console:
Python {
// ...
onError: console.log('Error: ' + traceback)
}
Once your application grows, it might make sense to maybe show the error to the
user in a dialog box, message or notification in addition to or instead of using
console.log()
to print the error.
Handling asynchronous events from Python in QML¶
Your Python code can send asynchronous events with optional data to the QML
layer using the pyotherside.send()
function. You can call this function from
functions called from QML, but also from anywhere else - including threads that
you created in Python. The first parameter is mandatory, and must be a string
that identifies the event. Additional parameters are optional and can be of any
data type that PyOtherSide supports:
import pyotherside
pyotherside.send('new-entries', 100, 123)
If you do not add a special handler on the Python
object, such events would
be handled by the received()
signal handler in QML - its data
parameter
contains the event name and all arguments in a list:
Python {
// ..
onReceived: console.log('Event: ' + data)
}
Usually, you want to install a handler for such events. If you have e.g. the
'new-entries'
event like shown above (with two numeric parameters that we
will call first
and last
for this example), you might want to define a
simple handler function that will process this event:
Python {
// ..
Component.onCompleted: {
setHandler('new-entries', function (first, last) {
console.log('New entries from ' + first + ' to ' + last);
});
}
}
Once a handler for a given event is defined, the received()
signal will not
be emitted anymore. If you need to unset a handler for a given event, you can
use setHandler('event', undefined)
to do so.
In some cases, it might be useful to not install a handler function directly, but
turn the pyotherside.send()
call into a new signal on the Python
object.
As there is no easy way for PyOtherSide to determine the names of the arguments
of the event, you have to define and hook up these signals manually. The upside
of having to define the signals this way is that all signals will be nicely
documented in your QML file for future reference:
Python {
signal updated()
signal newEntries(int first, int last)
signal entryRenamed(int index, string name)
Component.onCompleted: {
setHandler('updated', updated);
setHandler('new-entries', newEntries);
setHandler('entry-renamed', entryRenamed);
}
}
With this setup, you can now emit these signals from the Python
object by
using pyotherside.send()
in your Python code:
pyotherside.send('updated')
pyotherside.send('new-entries', 20, 30)
pyotherside.send('entry-renamed', 11, 'Hello World')
Loading ListModel
data from Python¶
Most of the time a PyOtherSide QML application will display some data stored somewhere and retrieved or generated with Python. The easiest way to do this is to return a list-of-dicts in your Python function:
listmodel.py
def get_data():
return [
{'name': 'Alpha', 'team': 'red'},
{'name': 'Beta', 'team': 'blue'},
{'name': 'Gamma', 'team': 'green'},
{'name': 'Delta', 'team': 'yellow'},
{'name': 'Epsilon', 'team': 'orange'},
]
Of course, the function could do other things (such as doing web requests, querying
databases, etc..) - as long as it returns a list-of-dicts, it will be fine (if you
are using a generator that yields dicts, just wrap the generator with list()
).
Using this function from QML is straightforward:
listmodel.qml
import QtQuick 2.0
import io.thp.pyotherside 1.5
Rectangle {
color: 'black'
width: 400
height: 400
ListView {
anchors.fill: parent
model: ListModel {
id: listModel
}
delegate: Text {
// Both "name" and "team" are taken from the model
text: name
color: team
}
}
Python {
id: py
Component.onCompleted: {
// Add the directory of this .qml file to the search path
addImportPath(Qt.resolvedUrl('.'));
// Import the main module and load the data
importModule('listmodel', function () {
py.call('listmodel.get_data', [], function(result) {
// Load the received data into the list model
for (var i=0; i<result.length; i++) {
listModel.append(result[i]);
}
});
});
}
}
}
Instead of passing a list-of-dicts, it is of course also possible to send
new list items via pyotherside.send()
, one item at a time, and append
them to the list model that way.
Rendering RGBA image data in Python¶
New in version 1.1.0.
This example uses the image provider feature of PyOtherSide to
render RGB image data in Python and display the rendered data in
QML using a normal QtQuick 2.0 Image
element:
imageprovider.py
import pyotherside
import math
def render(image_id, requested_size):
print('image_id: "{image_id}", size: {requested_size}'.format(**locals()))
# width and height will be -1 if not set in QML
if requested_size == (-1, -1):
requested_size = (300, 300)
width, height = requested_size
# center for circle
cx, cy = width/2, 10
pixels = []
for y in range(height):
for x in range(width):
pixels.extend(reversed([
255, # alpha
int(10 + 10 * ((x - y * 0.5) % 20)), # red
20 + 10 * (y % 20), # green
int(255 * abs(math.sin(0.3*math.sqrt((cx-x)**2 + (cy-y)**2)))) # blue
]))
return bytearray(pixels), (width, height), pyotherside.format_argb32
pyotherside.set_image_provider(render)
This module can now be imported in QML and used as source
in the QML
Image
element:
imageprovider.qml
import QtQuick 2.0
import io.thp.pyotherside 1.5
Image {
id: image
width: 300
height: 300
Python {
Component.onCompleted: {
// Add the directory of this .qml file to the search path
addImportPath(Qt.resolvedUrl('.'));
importModule('imageprovider', function () {
image.source = 'image://python/image-id-passed-from-qml';
});
}
onError: console.log('Python error: ' + traceback)
}
}
Rendering with PyOpenGL¶
New in version 1.5.0.
The example below shows how to do raw OpenGL rendering in PyOpenGL using
PyGLArea
. It has been adapted from the tutorial in the Qt documentation at
http://qt-project.org/doc/qt-5/qtquick-scenegraph-openglunderqml-example.html.
renderer.py
import numpy
from OpenGL.GL import *
from OpenGL.GL.shaders import compileShader, compileProgram
VERTEX_SHADER = """#version 130
attribute highp vec4 vertices;
varying highp vec2 coords;
void main() {
gl_Position = vertices;
coords = vertices.xy;
}
"""
FRAGMENT_SHADER = """#version 130
uniform lowp float t;
varying highp vec2 coords;
void main() {
lowp float i = 1. - (pow(abs(coords.x), 4.) + pow(abs(coords.y), 4.));
i = smoothstep(t - 0.8, t + 0.8, i);
i = floor(i * 20.) / 20.;
gl_FragColor = vec4(coords * .5 + .5, i, i);
}
"""
class Renderer(object):
def __init__(self):
self.t = 0.0
self.values = numpy.array([
-1.0, -1.0,
1.0, -1.0,
-1.0, 1.0,
1.0, 1.0
], dtype=numpy.float32)
def set_t(self, t):
self.t = t
def init(self):
self.vertexbuffer = glGenBuffers(1)
vertex_shader = compileShader(VERTEX_SHADER, GL_VERTEX_SHADER)
fragment_shader = compileShader(FRAGMENT_SHADER, GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER)
self.program = compileProgram(vertex_shader, fragment_shader)
self.vertices_attr = glGetAttribLocation(self.program, b'vertices')
self.t_attr = glGetUniformLocation(self.program, b't')
def reshape(self, x, y, width, height):
glViewport(x, y, width, height)
def render(self):
glUseProgram(self.program)
try:
glDisable(GL_DEPTH_TEST)
glClearColor(0, 0, 0, 1)
glClear(GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT)
glEnable(GL_BLEND)
glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE)
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, self.vertexbuffer)
glEnableVertexAttribArray(self.vertices_attr)
glBufferData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, self.values, GL_STATIC_DRAW)
glVertexAttribPointer(self.vertices_attr, 2, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, 0, None)
glUniform1f(self.t_attr, self.t)
glDrawArrays(GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP, 0, 4)
finally:
glDisableVertexAttribArray(0)
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, 0)
glUseProgram(0)
def cleanup(self):
glDeleteProgram(self.program)
glDeleteBuffers(1, [self.vertexbuffer])
pyglarea.qml
import QtQuick 2.0
import io.thp.pyotherside 1.5
Item {
width: 320
height: 480
PyGLArea {
id: glArea
anchors.fill: parent
property var t: 0
SequentialAnimation on t {
NumberAnimation { to: 1; duration: 2500; easing.type: Easing.InQuad }
NumberAnimation { to: 0; duration: 2500; easing.type: Easing.OutQuad }
loops: Animation.Infinite
running: true
}
onTChanged: {
if (renderer) {
py.call(py.getattr(renderer, 'set_t'), [t], update);
}
}
}
Rectangle {
color: Qt.rgba(1, 1, 1, 0.7)
radius: 10
border.width: 1
border.color: "white"
anchors.fill: label
anchors.margins: -10
}
Text {
id: label
color: "black"
wrapMode: Text.WordWrap
text: "The background here is a squircle rendered with raw OpenGL using a PyGLArea. This text label and its border is rendered using QML"
anchors.right: parent.right
anchors.left: parent.left
anchors.bottom: parent.bottom
anchors.margins: 20
}
Python {
id: py
Component.onCompleted: {
addImportPath(Qt.resolvedUrl('.'));
importModule('renderer', function () {
call('renderer', [], function (renderer) {
glArea.renderer = renderer;
});
});
}
onError: console.log(traceback);
}
}
Building PyOtherSide¶
The following build requirements have to be satisfied to build PyOtherSide:
Qt 5.1.0 or newer (Qt 6.x also supported)
Python 3.3.0 or newer
If you have the required build-dependencies installed, building and installing the PyOtherSide plugin should be as simple as:
qmake # for Qt 6, use "qmake6"
make
make install
In case your system doesn’t provide python3-config
, you might have to
pass a suitable python-config
to qmake
at configure time:
qmake PYTHON_CONFIG=python3.3-config # For Qt 6, use "qmake6"
make
make install
Alternatively, you can edit python.pri
manually and specify the compiler
flags for compiling and linking against Python on your system.
ChangeLog¶
Version 1.6.0 (2022-08-05)¶
Support for Qt 6 (Qt 5 is still supported for now)
Use
PyUnicode_AsUTF8
from Python 3.3 when converting strings; strings returned from the converter are now valid as long as thePyObject
is alive (previously they were valid until the next string conversion or until converter was destroyed)Fixed
image_loader
andimageprovider_svg_data
examplesRemoved outdated build instructions for Android and Windows
Version 1.5.9 (2020-01-17)¶
Fix compilation on Windows with VS 2017 by avoiding VLAs (by Igor Malinovskiy, PR#106)
Ensure the Python GIL is obtained in unit tests, fixes Python 3.9-related crashes (fixes #111)
Version 1.5.8 (2019-06-16)¶
Really fix Python 3.8 build compatibility (fix by Dan Church, PR#105)
Version 1.5.7 (2019-06-06)¶
Fix Python 3.8 build compatibility by adding
--embed
topython-config
(with fallback for previous versions)
Version 1.5.6 (2019-06-06)¶
Add support for
QByteArray
, JSArrayBuffer
and Pythonbytes
conversion (by Igor Malinovskiy, PR#103)
Version 1.5.5 (2019-06-04)¶
Include
dlfcn.h
to fix build errors against musl libc (by Heiko Becker, PR#100)Add
--libs
topython3-config
command line (due to Python Issue 21536 changes; fixes #102)
Version 1.5.4 (2019-01-27)¶
Initialize
sys.argv
in Python for libraries that depend on it (issue #77)Update
plugins.qmltypes
and cleanup project files (by martyone, PR#95)Allow calling signals on QML objects from Python (issue #98)
Version 1.5.3 (2017-10-14)¶
Fix refcounting/ownership issue when using the QRC importer module (issue #84)
Version 1.5.2 (2017-10-14)¶
Fix Python-to-Qt conversion for integers > 32 bits on platforms where
sizeof(long)
is 4 bytes (issue #86)
Version 1.5.1 (2017-03-17)¶
Fix
call_sync()
when used with parameters (fix by Robie Basak; issue #49)
Version 1.5.0 (2016-06-14)¶
Support for OpenGL rendering in Python using PyOpenGL >= 3.1.0
New QML components:
PyGLArea
,PyFBO
pythonVersion()
now returns the runtime Python versionAdd the library to
PYTHONPATH
for standard library appended as .zip (except on Windows)Call
PyDateTime_IMPORT
as often as necessary (Fixes #46)Added
pyotherside.format_svg_data
for using SVG data in the image providerHandle converting
QVariantHash
to Pythondict
typeAdded
.qmltypes
file to provide metadata information for Qt CreatorNew functions
importNames()
andimportNames_sync()
for from-imports
Version 1.4.0 (2015-02-19)¶
Support for passing Python objects to QML and keeping references there
Add
getattr()
to get an attribute from a Python objectcall()
andcall_sync()
now also accept a Python callable as first argumentSupport for Accessing QObjects from Python (properties and slots)
Print error messages to the console if
error()
doesn’t have any handlers connected
Version 1.3.0 (2014-07-24)¶
Access to the Qt Resource System from Python (see Qt Resource Access).
QML API 1.3: Import from Qt Resources (
addImportPath()
withqrc:/
).Add
pyotherside.version
constant to access version from Python as string.Support for building on Windows, build instructions for Windows builds.
New data type conversions: Python
set
and iterable types (e.g. generator expressions and generators) are converted to JSArray
.
Version 1.2.0 (2014-02-16)¶
Introduced versioned QML imports for API change.
QML API 1.2: Change
importModule()
behavior for imports with dots.QML API 1.2: Emit
error()
when JavaScript callbacks passed toimportModule()
andcall()
throw an exception.New data type conversions: Python
datetime.date
,datetime.time
anddatetime.datetime
are converted to QMLdate
,time
and JSDate
types, respectively.
Version 1.1.0 (2014-02-06)¶
Add support for Python-based image providers (see Image Provider).
Fix threading crashes and aborts due to assertions.
addImportPath()
will automatically strip a leadingfile://
.Added
pluginVersion()
andpythonVersion()
for runtime version detection.
Version 1.0.0 (2013-08-08)¶
Initial QML plugin release.
Version 0.0.1 (2013-05-17)¶
Proof-of-concept (based on a prototype from May 2011).