In fact, it allways produce me classes like
pyferespost.map_less__int_comma__postLib_scope_nastran_scope_property__grate_,
I understand the reason but, is it a way to use python lists, sets and
dictionnaries instead of generated ones which seams to lack some
functionalities?
Or is it a way to implement these functionalities?
2008/6/19, Vincent Ferries <vin...@gm...>:
> I read this unit tests before, but don't seem to get the same type of
> vectors/maps.
>
> I don't really know what I am missing, maybe a wrong call policy?
> I set the call policy of getters on those maps to
> call_policies.reference_existing_object.
> The module creator generate me a list of vector and map wrappers with
> the methods I just listed above. I can't obviously access it like a
> list or a dictionary.
>
> I'm using base implementation of indexing_suite (not
> indexing_suite_v2, I have problems to compile while using it). If I
> can access different children elements it'll be fine for me, no real
> need of indexing_suite_v2.
>
> 2008/6/19, Roman Yakovenko <rom...@gm...>:
>> On Thu, Jun 19, 2008 at 11:00 AM, Vincent Ferries
>> <vin...@gm...> wrote:
>>> For dictionaries you can directly use structures like :
>>>
>>> for (key, values) in dict:
>>>
>>> and the key/values elements will be matching key and list of values.
>>>
>>>
>>> But I'm not able to access them in this way.
>>>
>>>
>>> Using reflection to list accessibles methods on the map I get :
>>>
>>> __call__ x.__call__(...) <==> x(...)
>>> __class__ instancemethod(function, instance, class) Create an
>>> instance method object.
>>> __cmp__ x.__cmp__(y) <==> cmp(x,y)
>>> __delattr__ x.__delattr__('name') <==> del x.name
>>> __get__ descr.__get__(obj[, type]) -> value
>>> __getattribute__ x.__getattribute__('name') <==> x.name
>>> __hash__ x.__hash__() <==> hash(x)
>>> __init__ x.__init__(...) initializes x; see x.__class__.__doc__ for
>>> signature
>>> __new__ T.__new__(S, ...) -> a new object with type S, a subtype of T
>>> __reduce__ helper for pickle
>>> __reduce_ex__ helper for pickle
>>> __repr__ x.__repr__() <==> repr(x)
>>> __setattr__ x.__setattr__('name', value) <==> x.name = value
>>> __str__ x.__str__() <==> str(x)
>>> im_class None
>>> im_func None
>>>
>>>
>>> "values" function don't appear...
>>
>> Please create small test case that reproduce the problem.
>>
>> According to my unit tests
>> *
>> http://pygccxml.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/pygccxml/pyplusplus_dev/unittests/indexing_suites_tester.py?revision=414&view=markup
>> *
>> http://pygccxml.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/pygccxml/pyplusplus_dev/unittests/indexing_suites2_tester.py?revision=1081&view=markup
>>
>> the functionality works just fine.
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Roman Yakovenko
>> C++ Python language binding
>> http://www.language-binding.net/
>>
>
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