1.. highlightlang:: c 2 3********************** 4Argument Clinic How-To 5********************** 6 7:author: Larry Hastings 8 9 10.. topic:: Abstract 11 12 Argument Clinic is a preprocessor for CPython C files. 13 Its purpose is to automate all the boilerplate involved 14 with writing argument parsing code for "builtins". 15 This document shows you how to convert your first C 16 function to work with Argument Clinic, and then introduces 17 some advanced topics on Argument Clinic usage. 18 19 Currently Argument Clinic is considered internal-only 20 for CPython. Its use is not supported for files outside 21 CPython, and no guarantees are made regarding backwards 22 compatibility for future versions. In other words: if you 23 maintain an external C extension for CPython, you're welcome 24 to experiment with Argument Clinic in your own code. But the 25 version of Argument Clinic that ships with CPython 3.5 *could* 26 be totally incompatible and break all your code. 27 28The Goals Of Argument Clinic 29============================ 30 31Argument Clinic's primary goal 32is to take over responsibility for all argument parsing code 33inside CPython. This means that, when you convert a function 34to work with Argument Clinic, that function should no longer 35do any of its own argument parsing—the code generated by 36Argument Clinic should be a "black box" to you, where CPython 37calls in at the top, and your code gets called at the bottom, 38with ``PyObject *args`` (and maybe ``PyObject *kwargs``) 39magically converted into the C variables and types you need. 40 41In order for Argument Clinic to accomplish its primary goal, 42it must be easy to use. Currently, working with CPython's 43argument parsing library is a chore, requiring maintaining 44redundant information in a surprising number of places. 45When you use Argument Clinic, you don't have to repeat yourself. 46 47Obviously, no one would want to use Argument Clinic unless 48it's solving their problem—and without creating new problems of 49its own. 50So it's paramount that Argument Clinic generate correct code. 51It'd be nice if the code was faster, too, but at the very least 52it should not introduce a major speed regression. (Eventually Argument 53Clinic *should* make a major speedup possible—we could 54rewrite its code generator to produce tailor-made argument 55parsing code, rather than calling the general-purpose CPython 56argument parsing library. That would make for the fastest 57argument parsing possible!) 58 59Additionally, Argument Clinic must be flexible enough to 60work with any approach to argument parsing. Python has 61some functions with some very strange parsing behaviors; 62Argument Clinic's goal is to support all of them. 63 64Finally, the original motivation for Argument Clinic was 65to provide introspection "signatures" for CPython builtins. 66It used to be, the introspection query functions would throw 67an exception if you passed in a builtin. With Argument 68Clinic, that's a thing of the past! 69 70One idea you should keep in mind, as you work with 71Argument Clinic: the more information you give it, the 72better job it'll be able to do. 73Argument Clinic is admittedly relatively simple right 74now. But as it evolves it will get more sophisticated, 75and it should be able to do many interesting and smart 76things with all the information you give it. 77 78 79Basic Concepts And Usage 80======================== 81 82Argument Clinic ships with CPython; you'll find it in ``Tools/clinic/clinic.py``. 83If you run that script, specifying a C file as an argument: 84 85.. code-block:: shell-session 86 87 $ python3 Tools/clinic/clinic.py foo.c 88 89Argument Clinic will scan over the file looking for lines that 90look exactly like this: 91 92.. code-block:: none 93 94 /*[clinic input] 95 96When it finds one, it reads everything up to a line that looks 97exactly like this: 98 99.. code-block:: none 100 101 [clinic start generated code]*/ 102 103Everything in between these two lines is input for Argument Clinic. 104All of these lines, including the beginning and ending comment 105lines, are collectively called an Argument Clinic "block". 106 107When Argument Clinic parses one of these blocks, it 108generates output. This output is rewritten into the C file 109immediately after the block, followed by a comment containing a checksum. 110The Argument Clinic block now looks like this: 111 112.. code-block:: none 113 114 /*[clinic input] 115 ... clinic input goes here ... 116 [clinic start generated code]*/ 117 ... clinic output goes here ... 118 /*[clinic end generated code: checksum=...]*/ 119 120If you run Argument Clinic on the same file a second time, Argument Clinic 121will discard the old output and write out the new output with a fresh checksum 122line. However, if the input hasn't changed, the output won't change either. 123 124You should never modify the output portion of an Argument Clinic block. Instead, 125change the input until it produces the output you want. (That's the purpose of the 126checksum—to detect if someone changed the output, as these edits would be lost 127the next time Argument Clinic writes out fresh output.) 128 129For the sake of clarity, here's the terminology we'll use with Argument Clinic: 130 131* The first line of the comment (``/*[clinic input]``) is the *start line*. 132* The last line of the initial comment (``[clinic start generated code]*/``) is the *end line*. 133* The last line (``/*[clinic end generated code: checksum=...]*/``) is the *checksum line*. 134* In between the start line and the end line is the *input*. 135* In between the end line and the checksum line is the *output*. 136* All the text collectively, from the start line to the checksum line inclusively, 137 is the *block*. (A block that hasn't been successfully processed by Argument 138 Clinic yet doesn't have output or a checksum line, but it's still considered 139 a block.) 140 141 142Converting Your First Function 143============================== 144 145The best way to get a sense of how Argument Clinic works is to 146convert a function to work with it. Here, then, are the bare 147minimum steps you'd need to follow to convert a function to 148work with Argument Clinic. Note that for code you plan to 149check in to CPython, you really should take the conversion farther, 150using some of the advanced concepts you'll see later on in 151the document (like "return converters" and "self converters"). 152But we'll keep it simple for this walkthrough so you can learn. 153 154Let's dive in! 155 1560. Make sure you're working with a freshly updated checkout 157 of the CPython trunk. 158 1591. Find a Python builtin that calls either :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple` 160 or :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords`, and hasn't been converted 161 to work with Argument Clinic yet. 162 For my example I'm using ``_pickle.Pickler.dump()``. 163 1642. If the call to the ``PyArg_Parse`` function uses any of the 165 following format units: 166 167 .. code-block:: none 168 169 O& 170 O! 171 es 172 es# 173 et 174 et# 175 176 or if it has multiple calls to :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple`, 177 you should choose a different function. Argument Clinic *does* 178 support all of these scenarios. But these are advanced 179 topics—let's do something simpler for your first function. 180 181 Also, if the function has multiple calls to :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple` 182 or :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords` where it supports different 183 types for the same argument, or if the function uses something besides 184 PyArg_Parse functions to parse its arguments, it probably 185 isn't suitable for conversion to Argument Clinic. Argument Clinic 186 doesn't support generic functions or polymorphic parameters. 187 1883. Add the following boilerplate above the function, creating our block:: 189 190 /*[clinic input] 191 [clinic start generated code]*/ 192 1934. Cut the docstring and paste it in between the ``[clinic]`` lines, 194 removing all the junk that makes it a properly quoted C string. 195 When you're done you should have just the text, based at the left 196 margin, with no line wider than 80 characters. 197 (Argument Clinic will preserve indents inside the docstring.) 198 199 If the old docstring had a first line that looked like a function 200 signature, throw that line away. (The docstring doesn't need it 201 anymore—when you use ``help()`` on your builtin in the future, 202 the first line will be built automatically based on the function's 203 signature.) 204 205 Sample:: 206 207 /*[clinic input] 208 Write a pickled representation of obj to the open file. 209 [clinic start generated code]*/ 210 2115. If your docstring doesn't have a "summary" line, Argument Clinic will 212 complain. So let's make sure it has one. The "summary" line should 213 be a paragraph consisting of a single 80-column line 214 at the beginning of the docstring. 215 216 (Our example docstring consists solely of a summary line, so the sample 217 code doesn't have to change for this step.) 218 2196. Above the docstring, enter the name of the function, followed 220 by a blank line. This should be the Python name of the function, 221 and should be the full dotted path 222 to the function—it should start with the name of the module, 223 include any sub-modules, and if the function is a method on 224 a class it should include the class name too. 225 226 Sample:: 227 228 /*[clinic input] 229 _pickle.Pickler.dump 230 231 Write a pickled representation of obj to the open file. 232 [clinic start generated code]*/ 233 2347. If this is the first time that module or class has been used with Argument 235 Clinic in this C file, 236 you must declare the module and/or class. Proper Argument Clinic hygiene 237 prefers declaring these in a separate block somewhere near the 238 top of the C file, in the same way that include files and statics go at 239 the top. (In our sample code we'll just show the two blocks next to 240 each other.) 241 242 The name of the class and module should be the same as the one 243 seen by Python. Check the name defined in the :c:type:`PyModuleDef` 244 or :c:type:`PyTypeObject` as appropriate. 245 246 When you declare a class, you must also specify two aspects of its type 247 in C: the type declaration you'd use for a pointer to an instance of 248 this class, and a pointer to the :c:type:`PyTypeObject` for this class. 249 250 Sample:: 251 252 /*[clinic input] 253 module _pickle 254 class _pickle.Pickler "PicklerObject *" "&Pickler_Type" 255 [clinic start generated code]*/ 256 257 /*[clinic input] 258 _pickle.Pickler.dump 259 260 Write a pickled representation of obj to the open file. 261 [clinic start generated code]*/ 262 263 264 265 2668. Declare each of the parameters to the function. Each parameter 267 should get its own line. All the parameter lines should be 268 indented from the function name and the docstring. 269 270 The general form of these parameter lines is as follows:: 271 272 name_of_parameter: converter 273 274 If the parameter has a default value, add that after the 275 converter:: 276 277 name_of_parameter: converter = default_value 278 279 Argument Clinic's support for "default values" is quite sophisticated; 280 please see :ref:`the section below on default values <default_values>` 281 for more information. 282 283 Add a blank line below the parameters. 284 285 What's a "converter"? It establishes both the type 286 of the variable used in C, and the method to convert the Python 287 value into a C value at runtime. 288 For now you're going to use what's called a "legacy converter"—a 289 convenience syntax intended to make porting old code into Argument 290 Clinic easier. 291 292 For each parameter, copy the "format unit" for that 293 parameter from the ``PyArg_Parse()`` format argument and 294 specify *that* as its converter, as a quoted 295 string. ("format unit" is the formal name for the one-to-three 296 character substring of the ``format`` parameter that tells 297 the argument parsing function what the type of the variable 298 is and how to convert it. For more on format units please 299 see :ref:`arg-parsing`.) 300 301 For multicharacter format units like ``z#``, use the 302 entire two-or-three character string. 303 304 Sample:: 305 306 /*[clinic input] 307 module _pickle 308 class _pickle.Pickler "PicklerObject *" "&Pickler_Type" 309 [clinic start generated code]*/ 310 311 /*[clinic input] 312 _pickle.Pickler.dump 313 314 obj: 'O' 315 316 Write a pickled representation of obj to the open file. 317 [clinic start generated code]*/ 318 3199. If your function has ``|`` in the format string, meaning some 320 parameters have default values, you can ignore it. Argument 321 Clinic infers which parameters are optional based on whether 322 or not they have default values. 323 324 If your function has ``$`` in the format string, meaning it 325 takes keyword-only arguments, specify ``*`` on a line by 326 itself before the first keyword-only argument, indented the 327 same as the parameter lines. 328 329 (``_pickle.Pickler.dump`` has neither, so our sample is unchanged.) 330 331 33210. If the existing C function calls :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple` 333 (as opposed to :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords`), then all its 334 arguments are positional-only. 335 336 To mark all parameters as positional-only in Argument Clinic, 337 add a ``/`` on a line by itself after the last parameter, 338 indented the same as the parameter lines. 339 340 Currently this is all-or-nothing; either all parameters are 341 positional-only, or none of them are. (In the future Argument 342 Clinic may relax this restriction.) 343 344 Sample:: 345 346 /*[clinic input] 347 module _pickle 348 class _pickle.Pickler "PicklerObject *" "&Pickler_Type" 349 [clinic start generated code]*/ 350 351 /*[clinic input] 352 _pickle.Pickler.dump 353 354 obj: 'O' 355 / 356 357 Write a pickled representation of obj to the open file. 358 [clinic start generated code]*/ 359 36011. It's helpful to write a per-parameter docstring for each parameter. 361 But per-parameter docstrings are optional; you can skip this step 362 if you prefer. 363 364 Here's how to add a per-parameter docstring. The first line 365 of the per-parameter docstring must be indented further than the 366 parameter definition. The left margin of this first line establishes 367 the left margin for the whole per-parameter docstring; all the text 368 you write will be outdented by this amount. You can write as much 369 text as you like, across multiple lines if you wish. 370 371 Sample:: 372 373 /*[clinic input] 374 module _pickle 375 class _pickle.Pickler "PicklerObject *" "&Pickler_Type" 376 [clinic start generated code]*/ 377 378 /*[clinic input] 379 _pickle.Pickler.dump 380 381 obj: 'O' 382 The object to be pickled. 383 / 384 385 Write a pickled representation of obj to the open file. 386 [clinic start generated code]*/ 387 38812. Save and close the file, then run ``Tools/clinic/clinic.py`` on 389 it. With luck everything worked---your block now has output, and 390 a ``.c.h`` file has been generated! Reopen the file in your 391 text editor to see:: 392 393 /*[clinic input] 394 _pickle.Pickler.dump 395 396 obj: 'O' 397 The object to be pickled. 398 / 399 400 Write a pickled representation of obj to the open file. 401 [clinic start generated code]*/ 402 403 static PyObject * 404 _pickle_Pickler_dump(PicklerObject *self, PyObject *obj) 405 /*[clinic end generated code: output=87ecad1261e02ac7 input=552eb1c0f52260d9]*/ 406 407 Obviously, if Argument Clinic didn't produce any output, it's because 408 it found an error in your input. Keep fixing your errors and retrying 409 until Argument Clinic processes your file without complaint. 410 411 For readability, most of the glue code has been generated to a ``.c.h`` 412 file. You'll need to include that in your original ``.c`` file, 413 typically right after the clinic module block:: 414 415 #include "clinic/_pickle.c.h" 416 41713. Double-check that the argument-parsing code Argument Clinic generated 418 looks basically the same as the existing code. 419 420 First, ensure both places use the same argument-parsing function. 421 The existing code must call either 422 :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple` or :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords`; 423 ensure that the code generated by Argument Clinic calls the 424 *exact* same function. 425 426 Second, the format string passed in to :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple` or 427 :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords` should be *exactly* the same 428 as the hand-written one in the existing function, up to the colon 429 or semi-colon. 430 431 (Argument Clinic always generates its format strings 432 with a ``:`` followed by the name of the function. If the 433 existing code's format string ends with ``;``, to provide 434 usage help, this change is harmless—don't worry about it.) 435 436 Third, for parameters whose format units require two arguments 437 (like a length variable, or an encoding string, or a pointer 438 to a conversion function), ensure that the second argument is 439 *exactly* the same between the two invocations. 440 441 Fourth, inside the output portion of the block you'll find a preprocessor 442 macro defining the appropriate static :c:type:`PyMethodDef` structure for 443 this builtin:: 444 445 #define __PICKLE_PICKLER_DUMP_METHODDEF \ 446 {"dump", (PyCFunction)__pickle_Pickler_dump, METH_O, __pickle_Pickler_dump__doc__}, 447 448 This static structure should be *exactly* the same as the existing static 449 :c:type:`PyMethodDef` structure for this builtin. 450 451 If any of these items differ in *any way*, 452 adjust your Argument Clinic function specification and rerun 453 ``Tools/clinic/clinic.py`` until they *are* the same. 454 455 45614. Notice that the last line of its output is the declaration 457 of your "impl" function. This is where the builtin's implementation goes. 458 Delete the existing prototype of the function you're modifying, but leave 459 the opening curly brace. Now delete its argument parsing code and the 460 declarations of all the variables it dumps the arguments into. 461 Notice how the Python arguments are now arguments to this impl function; 462 if the implementation used different names for these variables, fix it. 463 464 Let's reiterate, just because it's kind of weird. Your code should now 465 look like this:: 466 467 static return_type 468 your_function_impl(...) 469 /*[clinic end generated code: checksum=...]*/ 470 { 471 ... 472 473 Argument Clinic generated the checksum line and the function prototype just 474 above it. You should write the opening (and closing) curly braces for the 475 function, and the implementation inside. 476 477 Sample:: 478 479 /*[clinic input] 480 module _pickle 481 class _pickle.Pickler "PicklerObject *" "&Pickler_Type" 482 [clinic start generated code]*/ 483 /*[clinic end generated code: checksum=da39a3ee5e6b4b0d3255bfef95601890afd80709]*/ 484 485 /*[clinic input] 486 _pickle.Pickler.dump 487 488 obj: 'O' 489 The object to be pickled. 490 / 491 492 Write a pickled representation of obj to the open file. 493 [clinic start generated code]*/ 494 495 PyDoc_STRVAR(__pickle_Pickler_dump__doc__, 496 "Write a pickled representation of obj to the open file.\n" 497 "\n" 498 ... 499 static PyObject * 500 _pickle_Pickler_dump_impl(PicklerObject *self, PyObject *obj) 501 /*[clinic end generated code: checksum=3bd30745bf206a48f8b576a1da3d90f55a0a4187]*/ 502 { 503 /* Check whether the Pickler was initialized correctly (issue3664). 504 Developers often forget to call __init__() in their subclasses, which 505 would trigger a segfault without this check. */ 506 if (self->write == NULL) { 507 PyErr_Format(PicklingError, 508 "Pickler.__init__() was not called by %s.__init__()", 509 Py_TYPE(self)->tp_name); 510 return NULL; 511 } 512 513 if (_Pickler_ClearBuffer(self) < 0) 514 return NULL; 515 516 ... 517 51815. Remember the macro with the :c:type:`PyMethodDef` structure for this 519 function? Find the existing :c:type:`PyMethodDef` structure for this 520 function and replace it with a reference to the macro. (If the builtin 521 is at module scope, this will probably be very near the end of the file; 522 if the builtin is a class method, this will probably be below but relatively 523 near to the implementation.) 524 525 Note that the body of the macro contains a trailing comma. So when you 526 replace the existing static :c:type:`PyMethodDef` structure with the macro, 527 *don't* add a comma to the end. 528 529 Sample:: 530 531 static struct PyMethodDef Pickler_methods[] = { 532 __PICKLE_PICKLER_DUMP_METHODDEF 533 __PICKLE_PICKLER_CLEAR_MEMO_METHODDEF 534 {NULL, NULL} /* sentinel */ 535 }; 536 537 53816. Compile, then run the relevant portions of the regression-test suite. 539 This change should not introduce any new compile-time warnings or errors, 540 and there should be no externally-visible change to Python's behavior. 541 542 Well, except for one difference: ``inspect.signature()`` run on your function 543 should now provide a valid signature! 544 545 Congratulations, you've ported your first function to work with Argument Clinic! 546 547Advanced Topics 548=============== 549 550Now that you've had some experience working with Argument Clinic, it's time 551for some advanced topics. 552 553 554Symbolic default values 555----------------------- 556 557The default value you provide for a parameter can't be any arbitrary 558expression. Currently the following are explicitly supported: 559 560* Numeric constants (integer and float) 561* String constants 562* ``True``, ``False``, and ``None`` 563* Simple symbolic constants like ``sys.maxsize``, which must 564 start with the name of the module 565 566In case you're curious, this is implemented in ``from_builtin()`` 567in ``Lib/inspect.py``. 568 569(In the future, this may need to get even more elaborate, 570to allow full expressions like ``CONSTANT - 1``.) 571 572 573Renaming the C functions and variables generated by Argument Clinic 574------------------------------------------------------------------- 575 576Argument Clinic automatically names the functions it generates for you. 577Occasionally this may cause a problem, if the generated name collides with 578the name of an existing C function. There's an easy solution: override the names 579used for the C functions. Just add the keyword ``"as"`` 580to your function declaration line, followed by the function name you wish to use. 581Argument Clinic will use that function name for the base (generated) function, 582then add ``"_impl"`` to the end and use that for the name of the impl function. 583 584For example, if we wanted to rename the C function names generated for 585``pickle.Pickler.dump``, it'd look like this:: 586 587 /*[clinic input] 588 pickle.Pickler.dump as pickler_dumper 589 590 ... 591 592The base function would now be named ``pickler_dumper()``, 593and the impl function would now be named ``pickler_dumper_impl()``. 594 595 596Similarly, you may have a problem where you want to give a parameter 597a specific Python name, but that name may be inconvenient in C. Argument 598Clinic allows you to give a parameter different names in Python and in C, 599using the same ``"as"`` syntax:: 600 601 /*[clinic input] 602 pickle.Pickler.dump 603 604 obj: object 605 file as file_obj: object 606 protocol: object = NULL 607 * 608 fix_imports: bool = True 609 610Here, the name used in Python (in the signature and the ``keywords`` 611array) would be ``file``, but the C variable would be named ``file_obj``. 612 613You can use this to rename the ``self`` parameter too! 614 615 616Converting functions using PyArg_UnpackTuple 617-------------------------------------------- 618 619To convert a function parsing its arguments with :c:func:`PyArg_UnpackTuple`, 620simply write out all the arguments, specifying each as an ``object``. You 621may specify the ``type`` argument to cast the type as appropriate. All 622arguments should be marked positional-only (add a ``/`` on a line by itself 623after the last argument). 624 625Currently the generated code will use :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple`, but this 626will change soon. 627 628Optional Groups 629--------------- 630 631Some legacy functions have a tricky approach to parsing their arguments: 632they count the number of positional arguments, then use a ``switch`` statement 633to call one of several different :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple` calls depending on 634how many positional arguments there are. (These functions cannot accept 635keyword-only arguments.) This approach was used to simulate optional 636arguments back before :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords` was created. 637 638While functions using this approach can often be converted to 639use :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords`, optional arguments, and default values, 640it's not always possible. Some of these legacy functions have 641behaviors :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords` doesn't directly support. 642The most obvious example is the builtin function ``range()``, which has 643an optional argument on the *left* side of its required argument! 644Another example is ``curses.window.addch()``, which has a group of two 645arguments that must always be specified together. (The arguments are 646called ``x`` and ``y``; if you call the function passing in ``x``, 647you must also pass in ``y``—and if you don't pass in ``x`` you may not 648pass in ``y`` either.) 649 650In any case, the goal of Argument Clinic is to support argument parsing 651for all existing CPython builtins without changing their semantics. 652Therefore Argument Clinic supports 653this alternate approach to parsing, using what are called *optional groups*. 654Optional groups are groups of arguments that must all be passed in together. 655They can be to the left or the right of the required arguments. They 656can *only* be used with positional-only parameters. 657 658.. note:: Optional groups are *only* intended for use when converting 659 functions that make multiple calls to :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple`! 660 Functions that use *any* other approach for parsing arguments 661 should *almost never* be converted to Argument Clinic using 662 optional groups. Functions using optional groups currently 663 cannot have accurate signatures in Python, because Python just 664 doesn't understand the concept. Please avoid using optional 665 groups wherever possible. 666 667To specify an optional group, add a ``[`` on a line by itself before 668the parameters you wish to group together, and a ``]`` on a line by itself 669after these parameters. As an example, here's how ``curses.window.addch`` 670uses optional groups to make the first two parameters and the last 671parameter optional:: 672 673 /*[clinic input] 674 675 curses.window.addch 676 677 [ 678 x: int 679 X-coordinate. 680 y: int 681 Y-coordinate. 682 ] 683 684 ch: object 685 Character to add. 686 687 [ 688 attr: long 689 Attributes for the character. 690 ] 691 / 692 693 ... 694 695 696Notes: 697 698* For every optional group, one additional parameter will be passed into the 699 impl function representing the group. The parameter will be an int named 700 ``group_{direction}_{number}``, 701 where ``{direction}`` is either ``right`` or ``left`` depending on whether the group 702 is before or after the required parameters, and ``{number}`` is a monotonically 703 increasing number (starting at 1) indicating how far away the group is from 704 the required parameters. When the impl is called, this parameter will be set 705 to zero if this group was unused, and set to non-zero if this group was used. 706 (By used or unused, I mean whether or not the parameters received arguments 707 in this invocation.) 708 709* If there are no required arguments, the optional groups will behave 710 as if they're to the right of the required arguments. 711 712* In the case of ambiguity, the argument parsing code 713 favors parameters on the left (before the required parameters). 714 715* Optional groups can only contain positional-only parameters. 716 717* Optional groups are *only* intended for legacy code. Please do not 718 use optional groups for new code. 719 720 721Using real Argument Clinic converters, instead of "legacy converters" 722--------------------------------------------------------------------- 723 724To save time, and to minimize how much you need to learn 725to achieve your first port to Argument Clinic, the walkthrough above tells 726you to use "legacy converters". "Legacy converters" are a convenience, 727designed explicitly to make porting existing code to Argument Clinic 728easier. And to be clear, their use is acceptable when porting code for 729Python 3.4. 730 731However, in the long term we probably want all our blocks to 732use Argument Clinic's real syntax for converters. Why? A couple 733reasons: 734 735* The proper converters are far easier to read and clearer in their intent. 736* There are some format units that are unsupported as "legacy converters", 737 because they require arguments, and the legacy converter syntax doesn't 738 support specifying arguments. 739* In the future we may have a new argument parsing library that isn't 740 restricted to what :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple` supports; this flexibility 741 won't be available to parameters using legacy converters. 742 743Therefore, if you don't mind a little extra effort, please use the normal 744converters instead of legacy converters. 745 746In a nutshell, the syntax for Argument Clinic (non-legacy) converters 747looks like a Python function call. However, if there are no explicit 748arguments to the function (all functions take their default values), 749you may omit the parentheses. Thus ``bool`` and ``bool()`` are exactly 750the same converters. 751 752All arguments to Argument Clinic converters are keyword-only. 753All Argument Clinic converters accept the following arguments: 754 755 ``c_default`` 756 The default value for this parameter when defined in C. 757 Specifically, this will be the initializer for the variable declared 758 in the "parse function". See :ref:`the section on default values <default_values>` 759 for how to use this. 760 Specified as a string. 761 762 ``annotation`` 763 The annotation value for this parameter. Not currently supported, 764 because PEP 8 mandates that the Python library may not use 765 annotations. 766 767In addition, some converters accept additional arguments. Here is a list 768of these arguments, along with their meanings: 769 770 ``accept`` 771 A set of Python types (and possibly pseudo-types); 772 this restricts the allowable Python argument to values of these types. 773 (This is not a general-purpose facility; as a rule it only supports 774 specific lists of types as shown in the legacy converter table.) 775 776 To accept ``None``, add ``NoneType`` to this set. 777 778 ``bitwise`` 779 Only supported for unsigned integers. The native integer value of this 780 Python argument will be written to the parameter without any range checking, 781 even for negative values. 782 783 ``converter`` 784 Only supported by the ``object`` converter. Specifies the name of a 785 :ref:`C "converter function" <o_ampersand>` 786 to use to convert this object to a native type. 787 788 ``encoding`` 789 Only supported for strings. Specifies the encoding to use when converting 790 this string from a Python str (Unicode) value into a C ``char *`` value. 791 792 793 ``subclass_of`` 794 Only supported for the ``object`` converter. Requires that the Python 795 value be a subclass of a Python type, as expressed in C. 796 797 ``type`` 798 Only supported for the ``object`` and ``self`` converters. Specifies 799 the C type that will be used to declare the variable. Default value is 800 ``"PyObject *"``. 801 802 ``zeroes`` 803 Only supported for strings. If true, embedded NUL bytes (``'\\0'``) are 804 permitted inside the value. The length of the string will be passed in 805 to the impl function, just after the string parameter, as a parameter named 806 ``<parameter_name>_length``. 807 808Please note, not every possible combination of arguments will work. 809Usually these arguments are implemented by specific ``PyArg_ParseTuple`` 810*format units*, with specific behavior. For example, currently you cannot 811call ``unsigned_short`` without also specifying ``bitwise=True``. 812Although it's perfectly reasonable to think this would work, these semantics don't 813map to any existing format unit. So Argument Clinic doesn't support it. (Or, at 814least, not yet.) 815 816Below is a table showing the mapping of legacy converters into real 817Argument Clinic converters. On the left is the legacy converter, 818on the right is the text you'd replace it with. 819 820========= ================================================================================= 821``'B'`` ``unsigned_char(bitwise=True)`` 822``'b'`` ``unsigned_char`` 823``'c'`` ``char`` 824``'C'`` ``int(accept={str})`` 825``'d'`` ``double`` 826``'D'`` ``Py_complex`` 827``'es'`` ``str(encoding='name_of_encoding')`` 828``'es#'`` ``str(encoding='name_of_encoding', zeroes=True)`` 829``'et'`` ``str(encoding='name_of_encoding', accept={bytes, bytearray, str})`` 830``'et#'`` ``str(encoding='name_of_encoding', accept={bytes, bytearray, str}, zeroes=True)`` 831``'f'`` ``float`` 832``'h'`` ``short`` 833``'H'`` ``unsigned_short(bitwise=True)`` 834``'i'`` ``int`` 835``'I'`` ``unsigned_int(bitwise=True)`` 836``'k'`` ``unsigned_long(bitwise=True)`` 837``'K'`` ``unsigned_long_long(bitwise=True)`` 838``'l'`` ``long`` 839``'L'`` ``long long`` 840``'n'`` ``Py_ssize_t`` 841``'O'`` ``object`` 842``'O!'`` ``object(subclass_of='&PySomething_Type')`` 843``'O&'`` ``object(converter='name_of_c_function')`` 844``'p'`` ``bool`` 845``'S'`` ``PyBytesObject`` 846``'s'`` ``str`` 847``'s#'`` ``str(zeroes=True)`` 848``'s*'`` ``Py_buffer(accept={buffer, str})`` 849``'U'`` ``unicode`` 850``'u'`` ``Py_UNICODE`` 851``'u#'`` ``Py_UNICODE(zeroes=True)`` 852``'w*'`` ``Py_buffer(accept={rwbuffer})`` 853``'Y'`` ``PyByteArrayObject`` 854``'y'`` ``str(accept={bytes})`` 855``'y#'`` ``str(accept={robuffer}, zeroes=True)`` 856``'y*'`` ``Py_buffer`` 857``'Z'`` ``Py_UNICODE(accept={str, NoneType})`` 858``'Z#'`` ``Py_UNICODE(accept={str, NoneType}, zeroes=True)`` 859``'z'`` ``str(accept={str, NoneType})`` 860``'z#'`` ``str(accept={str, NoneType}, zeroes=True)`` 861``'z*'`` ``Py_buffer(accept={buffer, str, NoneType})`` 862========= ================================================================================= 863 864As an example, here's our sample ``pickle.Pickler.dump`` using the proper 865converter:: 866 867 /*[clinic input] 868 pickle.Pickler.dump 869 870 obj: object 871 The object to be pickled. 872 / 873 874 Write a pickled representation of obj to the open file. 875 [clinic start generated code]*/ 876 877Argument Clinic will show you all the converters it has 878available. For each converter it'll show you all the parameters 879it accepts, along with the default value for each parameter. 880Just run ``Tools/clinic/clinic.py --converters`` to see the full list. 881 882Py_buffer 883--------- 884 885When using the ``Py_buffer`` converter 886(or the ``'s*'``, ``'w*'``, ``'*y'``, or ``'z*'`` legacy converters), 887you *must* not call :c:func:`PyBuffer_Release` on the provided buffer. 888Argument Clinic generates code that does it for you (in the parsing function). 889 890 891 892Advanced converters 893------------------- 894 895Remember those format units you skipped for your first 896time because they were advanced? Here's how to handle those too. 897 898The trick is, all those format units take arguments—either 899conversion functions, or types, or strings specifying an encoding. 900(But "legacy converters" don't support arguments. That's why we 901skipped them for your first function.) The argument you specified 902to the format unit is now an argument to the converter; this 903argument is either ``converter`` (for ``O&``), ``subclass_of`` (for ``O!``), 904or ``encoding`` (for all the format units that start with ``e``). 905 906When using ``subclass_of``, you may also want to use the other 907custom argument for ``object()``: ``type``, which lets you set the type 908actually used for the parameter. For example, if you want to ensure 909that the object is a subclass of ``PyUnicode_Type``, you probably want 910to use the converter ``object(type='PyUnicodeObject *', subclass_of='&PyUnicode_Type')``. 911 912One possible problem with using Argument Clinic: it takes away some possible 913flexibility for the format units starting with ``e``. When writing a 914``PyArg_Parse`` call by hand, you could theoretically decide at runtime what 915encoding string to pass in to :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple`. But now this string must 916be hard-coded at Argument-Clinic-preprocessing-time. This limitation is deliberate; 917it made supporting this format unit much easier, and may allow for future optimizations. 918This restriction doesn't seem unreasonable; CPython itself always passes in static 919hard-coded encoding strings for parameters whose format units start with ``e``. 920 921 922.. _default_values: 923 924Parameter default values 925------------------------ 926 927Default values for parameters can be any of a number of values. 928At their simplest, they can be string, int, or float literals:: 929 930 foo: str = "abc" 931 bar: int = 123 932 bat: float = 45.6 933 934They can also use any of Python's built-in constants:: 935 936 yep: bool = True 937 nope: bool = False 938 nada: object = None 939 940There's also special support for a default value of ``NULL``, and 941for simple expressions, documented in the following sections. 942 943 944The ``NULL`` default value 945-------------------------- 946 947For string and object parameters, you can set them to ``None`` to indicate 948that there's no default. However, that means the C variable will be 949initialized to ``Py_None``. For convenience's sakes, there's a special 950value called ``NULL`` for just this reason: from Python's perspective it 951behaves like a default value of ``None``, but the C variable is initialized 952with ``NULL``. 953 954Expressions specified as default values 955--------------------------------------- 956 957The default value for a parameter can be more than just a literal value. 958It can be an entire expression, using math operators and looking up attributes 959on objects. However, this support isn't exactly simple, because of some 960non-obvious semantics. 961 962Consider the following example:: 963 964 foo: Py_ssize_t = sys.maxsize - 1 965 966``sys.maxsize`` can have different values on different platforms. Therefore 967Argument Clinic can't simply evaluate that expression locally and hard-code it 968in C. So it stores the default in such a way that it will get evaluated at 969runtime, when the user asks for the function's signature. 970 971What namespace is available when the expression is evaluated? It's evaluated 972in the context of the module the builtin came from. So, if your module has an 973attribute called "``max_widgets``", you may simply use it:: 974 975 foo: Py_ssize_t = max_widgets 976 977If the symbol isn't found in the current module, it fails over to looking in 978``sys.modules``. That's how it can find ``sys.maxsize`` for example. (Since you 979don't know in advance what modules the user will load into their interpreter, 980it's best to restrict yourself to modules that are preloaded by Python itself.) 981 982Evaluating default values only at runtime means Argument Clinic can't compute 983the correct equivalent C default value. So you need to tell it explicitly. 984When you use an expression, you must also specify the equivalent expression 985in C, using the ``c_default`` parameter to the converter:: 986 987 foo: Py_ssize_t(c_default="PY_SSIZE_T_MAX - 1") = sys.maxsize - 1 988 989Another complication: Argument Clinic can't know in advance whether or not the 990expression you supply is valid. It parses it to make sure it looks legal, but 991it can't *actually* know. You must be very careful when using expressions to 992specify values that are guaranteed to be valid at runtime! 993 994Finally, because expressions must be representable as static C values, there 995are many restrictions on legal expressions. Here's a list of Python features 996you're not permitted to use: 997 998* Function calls. 999* Inline if statements (``3 if foo else 5``). 1000* Automatic sequence unpacking (``*[1, 2, 3]``). 1001* List/set/dict comprehensions and generator expressions. 1002* Tuple/list/set/dict literals. 1003 1004 1005 1006Using a return converter 1007------------------------ 1008 1009By default the impl function Argument Clinic generates for you returns ``PyObject *``. 1010But your C function often computes some C type, then converts it into the ``PyObject *`` 1011at the last moment. Argument Clinic handles converting your inputs from Python types 1012into native C types—why not have it convert your return value from a native C type 1013into a Python type too? 1014 1015That's what a "return converter" does. It changes your impl function to return 1016some C type, then adds code to the generated (non-impl) function to handle converting 1017that value into the appropriate ``PyObject *``. 1018 1019The syntax for return converters is similar to that of parameter converters. 1020You specify the return converter like it was a return annotation on the 1021function itself. Return converters behave much the same as parameter converters; 1022they take arguments, the arguments are all keyword-only, and if you're not changing 1023any of the default arguments you can omit the parentheses. 1024 1025(If you use both ``"as"`` *and* a return converter for your function, 1026the ``"as"`` should come before the return converter.) 1027 1028There's one additional complication when using return converters: how do you 1029indicate an error has occurred? Normally, a function returns a valid (non-``NULL``) 1030pointer for success, and ``NULL`` for failure. But if you use an integer return converter, 1031all integers are valid. How can Argument Clinic detect an error? Its solution: each return 1032converter implicitly looks for a special value that indicates an error. If you return 1033that value, and an error has been set (``PyErr_Occurred()`` returns a true 1034value), then the generated code will propagate the error. Otherwise it will 1035encode the value you return like normal. 1036 1037Currently Argument Clinic supports only a few return converters: 1038 1039.. code-block:: none 1040 1041 bool 1042 int 1043 unsigned int 1044 long 1045 unsigned int 1046 size_t 1047 Py_ssize_t 1048 float 1049 double 1050 DecodeFSDefault 1051 1052None of these take parameters. For the first three, return -1 to indicate 1053error. For ``DecodeFSDefault``, the return type is ``char *``; return a NULL 1054pointer to indicate an error. 1055 1056(There's also an experimental ``NoneType`` converter, which lets you 1057return ``Py_None`` on success or ``NULL`` on failure, without having 1058to increment the reference count on ``Py_None``. I'm not sure it adds 1059enough clarity to be worth using.) 1060 1061To see all the return converters Argument Clinic supports, along with 1062their parameters (if any), 1063just run ``Tools/clinic/clinic.py --converters`` for the full list. 1064 1065 1066Cloning existing functions 1067-------------------------- 1068 1069If you have a number of functions that look similar, you may be able to 1070use Clinic's "clone" feature. When you clone an existing function, 1071you reuse: 1072 1073* its parameters, including 1074 1075 * their names, 1076 1077 * their converters, with all parameters, 1078 1079 * their default values, 1080 1081 * their per-parameter docstrings, 1082 1083 * their *kind* (whether they're positional only, 1084 positional or keyword, or keyword only), and 1085 1086* its return converter. 1087 1088The only thing not copied from the original function is its docstring; 1089the syntax allows you to specify a new docstring. 1090 1091Here's the syntax for cloning a function:: 1092 1093 /*[clinic input] 1094 module.class.new_function [as c_basename] = module.class.existing_function 1095 1096 Docstring for new_function goes here. 1097 [clinic start generated code]*/ 1098 1099(The functions can be in different modules or classes. I wrote 1100``module.class`` in the sample just to illustrate that you must 1101use the full path to *both* functions.) 1102 1103Sorry, there's no syntax for partially-cloning a function, or cloning a function 1104then modifying it. Cloning is an all-or nothing proposition. 1105 1106Also, the function you are cloning from must have been previously defined 1107in the current file. 1108 1109Calling Python code 1110------------------- 1111 1112The rest of the advanced topics require you to write Python code 1113which lives inside your C file and modifies Argument Clinic's 1114runtime state. This is simple: you simply define a Python block. 1115 1116A Python block uses different delimiter lines than an Argument 1117Clinic function block. It looks like this:: 1118 1119 /*[python input] 1120 # python code goes here 1121 [python start generated code]*/ 1122 1123All the code inside the Python block is executed at the 1124time it's parsed. All text written to stdout inside the block 1125is redirected into the "output" after the block. 1126 1127As an example, here's a Python block that adds a static integer 1128variable to the C code:: 1129 1130 /*[python input] 1131 print('static int __ignored_unused_variable__ = 0;') 1132 [python start generated code]*/ 1133 static int __ignored_unused_variable__ = 0; 1134 /*[python checksum:...]*/ 1135 1136 1137Using a "self converter" 1138------------------------ 1139 1140Argument Clinic automatically adds a "self" parameter for you 1141using a default converter. It automatically sets the ``type`` 1142of this parameter to the "pointer to an instance" you specified 1143when you declared the type. However, you can override 1144Argument Clinic's converter and specify one yourself. 1145Just add your own ``self`` parameter as the first parameter in a 1146block, and ensure that its converter is an instance of 1147``self_converter`` or a subclass thereof. 1148 1149What's the point? This lets you override the type of ``self``, 1150or give it a different default name. 1151 1152How do you specify the custom type you want to cast ``self`` to? 1153If you only have one or two functions with the same type for ``self``, 1154you can directly use Argument Clinic's existing ``self`` converter, 1155passing in the type you want to use as the ``type`` parameter:: 1156 1157 /*[clinic input] 1158 1159 _pickle.Pickler.dump 1160 1161 self: self(type="PicklerObject *") 1162 obj: object 1163 / 1164 1165 Write a pickled representation of the given object to the open file. 1166 [clinic start generated code]*/ 1167 1168On the other hand, if you have a lot of functions that will use the same 1169type for ``self``, it's best to create your own converter, subclassing 1170``self_converter`` but overwriting the ``type`` member:: 1171 1172 /*[python input] 1173 class PicklerObject_converter(self_converter): 1174 type = "PicklerObject *" 1175 [python start generated code]*/ 1176 1177 /*[clinic input] 1178 1179 _pickle.Pickler.dump 1180 1181 self: PicklerObject 1182 obj: object 1183 / 1184 1185 Write a pickled representation of the given object to the open file. 1186 [clinic start generated code]*/ 1187 1188 1189 1190Writing a custom converter 1191-------------------------- 1192 1193As we hinted at in the previous section... you can write your own converters! 1194A converter is simply a Python class that inherits from ``CConverter``. 1195The main purpose of a custom converter is if you have a parameter using 1196the ``O&`` format unit—parsing this parameter means calling 1197a :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple` "converter function". 1198 1199Your converter class should be named ``*something*_converter``. 1200If the name follows this convention, then your converter class 1201will be automatically registered with Argument Clinic; its name 1202will be the name of your class with the ``_converter`` suffix 1203stripped off. (This is accomplished with a metaclass.) 1204 1205You shouldn't subclass ``CConverter.__init__``. Instead, you should 1206write a ``converter_init()`` function. ``converter_init()`` 1207always accepts a ``self`` parameter; after that, all additional 1208parameters *must* be keyword-only. Any arguments passed in to 1209the converter in Argument Clinic will be passed along to your 1210``converter_init()``. 1211 1212There are some additional members of ``CConverter`` you may wish 1213to specify in your subclass. Here's the current list: 1214 1215``type`` 1216 The C type to use for this variable. 1217 ``type`` should be a Python string specifying the type, e.g. ``int``. 1218 If this is a pointer type, the type string should end with ``' *'``. 1219 1220``default`` 1221 The Python default value for this parameter, as a Python value. 1222 Or the magic value ``unspecified`` if there is no default. 1223 1224``py_default`` 1225 ``default`` as it should appear in Python code, 1226 as a string. 1227 Or ``None`` if there is no default. 1228 1229``c_default`` 1230 ``default`` as it should appear in C code, 1231 as a string. 1232 Or ``None`` if there is no default. 1233 1234``c_ignored_default`` 1235 The default value used to initialize the C variable when 1236 there is no default, but not specifying a default may 1237 result in an "uninitialized variable" warning. This can 1238 easily happen when using option groups—although 1239 properly-written code will never actually use this value, 1240 the variable does get passed in to the impl, and the 1241 C compiler will complain about the "use" of the 1242 uninitialized value. This value should always be a 1243 non-empty string. 1244 1245``converter`` 1246 The name of the C converter function, as a string. 1247 1248``impl_by_reference`` 1249 A boolean value. If true, 1250 Argument Clinic will add a ``&`` in front of the name of 1251 the variable when passing it into the impl function. 1252 1253``parse_by_reference`` 1254 A boolean value. If true, 1255 Argument Clinic will add a ``&`` in front of the name of 1256 the variable when passing it into :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple`. 1257 1258 1259Here's the simplest example of a custom converter, from ``Modules/zlibmodule.c``:: 1260 1261 /*[python input] 1262 1263 class ssize_t_converter(CConverter): 1264 type = 'Py_ssize_t' 1265 converter = 'ssize_t_converter' 1266 1267 [python start generated code]*/ 1268 /*[python end generated code: output=da39a3ee5e6b4b0d input=35521e4e733823c7]*/ 1269 1270This block adds a converter to Argument Clinic named ``ssize_t``. Parameters 1271declared as ``ssize_t`` will be declared as type ``Py_ssize_t``, and will 1272be parsed by the ``'O&'`` format unit, which will call the 1273``ssize_t_converter`` converter function. ``ssize_t`` variables 1274automatically support default values. 1275 1276More sophisticated custom converters can insert custom C code to 1277handle initialization and cleanup. 1278You can see more examples of custom converters in the CPython 1279source tree; grep the C files for the string ``CConverter``. 1280 1281Writing a custom return converter 1282--------------------------------- 1283 1284Writing a custom return converter is much like writing 1285a custom converter. Except it's somewhat simpler, because return 1286converters are themselves much simpler. 1287 1288Return converters must subclass ``CReturnConverter``. 1289There are no examples yet of custom return converters, 1290because they are not widely used yet. If you wish to 1291write your own return converter, please read ``Tools/clinic/clinic.py``, 1292specifically the implementation of ``CReturnConverter`` and 1293all its subclasses. 1294 1295METH_O and METH_NOARGS 1296---------------------------------------------- 1297 1298To convert a function using ``METH_O``, make sure the function's 1299single argument is using the ``object`` converter, and mark the 1300arguments as positional-only:: 1301 1302 /*[clinic input] 1303 meth_o_sample 1304 1305 argument: object 1306 / 1307 [clinic start generated code]*/ 1308 1309 1310To convert a function using ``METH_NOARGS``, just don't specify 1311any arguments. 1312 1313You can still use a self converter, a return converter, and specify 1314a ``type`` argument to the object converter for ``METH_O``. 1315 1316tp_new and tp_init functions 1317---------------------------------------------- 1318 1319You can convert ``tp_new`` and ``tp_init`` functions. Just name 1320them ``__new__`` or ``__init__`` as appropriate. Notes: 1321 1322* The function name generated for ``__new__`` doesn't end in ``__new__`` 1323 like it would by default. It's just the name of the class, converted 1324 into a valid C identifier. 1325 1326* No ``PyMethodDef`` ``#define`` is generated for these functions. 1327 1328* ``__init__`` functions return ``int``, not ``PyObject *``. 1329 1330* Use the docstring as the class docstring. 1331 1332* Although ``__new__`` and ``__init__`` functions must always 1333 accept both the ``args`` and ``kwargs`` objects, when converting 1334 you may specify any signature for these functions that you like. 1335 (If your function doesn't support keywords, the parsing function 1336 generated will throw an exception if it receives any.) 1337 1338Changing and redirecting Clinic's output 1339---------------------------------------- 1340 1341It can be inconvenient to have Clinic's output interspersed with 1342your conventional hand-edited C code. Luckily, Clinic is configurable: 1343you can buffer up its output for printing later (or earlier!), or write 1344its output to a separate file. You can also add a prefix or suffix to 1345every line of Clinic's generated output. 1346 1347While changing Clinic's output in this manner can be a boon to readability, 1348it may result in Clinic code using types before they are defined, or 1349your code attempting to use Clinic-generated code before it is defined. 1350These problems can be easily solved by rearranging the declarations in your file, 1351or moving where Clinic's generated code goes. (This is why the default behavior 1352of Clinic is to output everything into the current block; while many people 1353consider this hampers readability, it will never require rearranging your 1354code to fix definition-before-use problems.) 1355 1356Let's start with defining some terminology: 1357 1358*field* 1359 A field, in this context, is a subsection of Clinic's output. 1360 For example, the ``#define`` for the ``PyMethodDef`` structure 1361 is a field, called ``methoddef_define``. Clinic has seven 1362 different fields it can output per function definition:: 1363 1364 docstring_prototype 1365 docstring_definition 1366 methoddef_define 1367 impl_prototype 1368 parser_prototype 1369 parser_definition 1370 impl_definition 1371 1372 All the names are of the form ``"<a>_<b>"``, 1373 where ``"<a>"`` is the semantic object represented (the parsing function, 1374 the impl function, the docstring, or the methoddef structure) and ``"<b>"`` 1375 represents what kind of statement the field is. Field names that end in 1376 ``"_prototype"`` 1377 represent forward declarations of that thing, without the actual body/data 1378 of the thing; field names that end in ``"_definition"`` represent the actual 1379 definition of the thing, with the body/data of the thing. (``"methoddef"`` 1380 is special, it's the only one that ends with ``"_define"``, representing that 1381 it's a preprocessor #define.) 1382 1383*destination* 1384 A destination is a place Clinic can write output to. There are 1385 five built-in destinations: 1386 1387 ``block`` 1388 The default destination: printed in the output section of 1389 the current Clinic block. 1390 1391 ``buffer`` 1392 A text buffer where you can save text for later. Text sent 1393 here is appended to the end of any existing text. It's an 1394 error to have any text left in the buffer when Clinic finishes 1395 processing a file. 1396 1397 ``file`` 1398 A separate "clinic file" that will be created automatically by Clinic. 1399 The filename chosen for the file is ``{basename}.clinic{extension}``, 1400 where ``basename`` and ``extension`` were assigned the output 1401 from ``os.path.splitext()`` run on the current file. (Example: 1402 the ``file`` destination for ``_pickle.c`` would be written to 1403 ``_pickle.clinic.c``.) 1404 1405 **Important: When using a** ``file`` **destination, you** 1406 *must check in* **the generated file!** 1407 1408 ``two-pass`` 1409 A buffer like ``buffer``. However, a two-pass buffer can only 1410 be written once, and it prints out all text sent to it during 1411 all of processing, even from Clinic blocks *after* the 1412 1413 ``suppress`` 1414 The text is suppressed—thrown away. 1415 1416 1417Clinic defines five new directives that let you reconfigure its output. 1418 1419The first new directive is ``dump``:: 1420 1421 dump <destination> 1422 1423This dumps the current contents of the named destination into the output of 1424the current block, and empties it. This only works with ``buffer`` and 1425``two-pass`` destinations. 1426 1427The second new directive is ``output``. The most basic form of ``output`` 1428is like this:: 1429 1430 output <field> <destination> 1431 1432This tells Clinic to output *field* to *destination*. ``output`` also 1433supports a special meta-destination, called ``everything``, which tells 1434Clinic to output *all* fields to that *destination*. 1435 1436``output`` has a number of other functions:: 1437 1438 output push 1439 output pop 1440 output preset <preset> 1441 1442 1443``output push`` and ``output pop`` allow you to push and pop 1444configurations on an internal configuration stack, so that you 1445can temporarily modify the output configuration, then easily restore 1446the previous configuration. Simply push before your change to save 1447the current configuration, then pop when you wish to restore the 1448previous configuration. 1449 1450``output preset`` sets Clinic's output to one of several built-in 1451preset configurations, as follows: 1452 1453 ``block`` 1454 Clinic's original starting configuration. Writes everything 1455 immediately after the input block. 1456 1457 Suppress the ``parser_prototype`` 1458 and ``docstring_prototype``, write everything else to ``block``. 1459 1460 ``file`` 1461 Designed to write everything to the "clinic file" that it can. 1462 You then ``#include`` this file near the top of your file. 1463 You may need to rearrange your file to make this work, though 1464 usually this just means creating forward declarations for various 1465 ``typedef`` and ``PyTypeObject`` definitions. 1466 1467 Suppress the ``parser_prototype`` 1468 and ``docstring_prototype``, write the ``impl_definition`` to 1469 ``block``, and write everything else to ``file``. 1470 1471 The default filename is ``"{dirname}/clinic/{basename}.h"``. 1472 1473 ``buffer`` 1474 Save up all most of the output from Clinic, to be written into 1475 your file near the end. For Python files implementing modules 1476 or builtin types, it's recommended that you dump the buffer 1477 just above the static structures for your module or 1478 builtin type; these are normally very near the end. Using 1479 ``buffer`` may require even more editing than ``file``, if 1480 your file has static ``PyMethodDef`` arrays defined in the 1481 middle of the file. 1482 1483 Suppress the ``parser_prototype``, ``impl_prototype``, 1484 and ``docstring_prototype``, write the ``impl_definition`` to 1485 ``block``, and write everything else to ``file``. 1486 1487 ``two-pass`` 1488 Similar to the ``buffer`` preset, but writes forward declarations to 1489 the ``two-pass`` buffer, and definitions to the ``buffer``. 1490 This is similar to the ``buffer`` preset, but may require 1491 less editing than ``buffer``. Dump the ``two-pass`` buffer 1492 near the top of your file, and dump the ``buffer`` near 1493 the end just like you would when using the ``buffer`` preset. 1494 1495 Suppresses the ``impl_prototype``, write the ``impl_definition`` 1496 to ``block``, write ``docstring_prototype``, ``methoddef_define``, 1497 and ``parser_prototype`` to ``two-pass``, write everything else 1498 to ``buffer``. 1499 1500 ``partial-buffer`` 1501 Similar to the ``buffer`` preset, but writes more things to ``block``, 1502 only writing the really big chunks of generated code to ``buffer``. 1503 This avoids the definition-before-use problem of ``buffer`` completely, 1504 at the small cost of having slightly more stuff in the block's output. 1505 Dump the ``buffer`` near the end, just like you would when using 1506 the ``buffer`` preset. 1507 1508 Suppresses the ``impl_prototype``, write the ``docstring_definition`` 1509 and ``parser_definition`` to ``buffer``, write everything else to ``block``. 1510 1511The third new directive is ``destination``:: 1512 1513 destination <name> <command> [...] 1514 1515This performs an operation on the destination named ``name``. 1516 1517There are two defined subcommands: ``new`` and ``clear``. 1518 1519The ``new`` subcommand works like this:: 1520 1521 destination <name> new <type> 1522 1523This creates a new destination with name ``<name>`` and type ``<type>``. 1524 1525There are five destination types: 1526 1527 ``suppress`` 1528 Throws the text away. 1529 1530 ``block`` 1531 Writes the text to the current block. This is what Clinic 1532 originally did. 1533 1534 ``buffer`` 1535 A simple text buffer, like the "buffer" builtin destination above. 1536 1537 ``file`` 1538 A text file. The file destination takes an extra argument, 1539 a template to use for building the filename, like so: 1540 1541 destination <name> new <type> <file_template> 1542 1543 The template can use three strings internally that will be replaced 1544 by bits of the filename: 1545 1546 {path} 1547 The full path to the file, including directory and full filename. 1548 {dirname} 1549 The name of the directory the file is in. 1550 {basename} 1551 Just the name of the file, not including the directory. 1552 {basename_root} 1553 Basename with the extension clipped off 1554 (everything up to but not including the last '.'). 1555 {basename_extension} 1556 The last '.' and everything after it. If the basename 1557 does not contain a period, this will be the empty string. 1558 1559 If there are no periods in the filename, {basename} and {filename} 1560 are the same, and {extension} is empty. "{basename}{extension}" 1561 is always exactly the same as "{filename}"." 1562 1563 ``two-pass`` 1564 A two-pass buffer, like the "two-pass" builtin destination above. 1565 1566 1567The ``clear`` subcommand works like this:: 1568 1569 destination <name> clear 1570 1571It removes all the accumulated text up to this point in the destination. 1572(I don't know what you'd need this for, but I thought maybe it'd be 1573useful while someone's experimenting.) 1574 1575The fourth new directive is ``set``:: 1576 1577 set line_prefix "string" 1578 set line_suffix "string" 1579 1580``set`` lets you set two internal variables in Clinic. 1581``line_prefix`` is a string that will be prepended to every line of Clinic's output; 1582``line_suffix`` is a string that will be appended to every line of Clinic's output. 1583 1584Both of these support two format strings: 1585 1586 ``{block comment start}`` 1587 Turns into the string ``/*``, the start-comment text sequence for C files. 1588 1589 ``{block comment end}`` 1590 Turns into the string ``*/``, the end-comment text sequence for C files. 1591 1592The final new directive is one you shouldn't need to use directly, 1593called ``preserve``:: 1594 1595 preserve 1596 1597This tells Clinic that the current contents of the output should be kept, unmodified. 1598This is used internally by Clinic when dumping output into ``file`` files; wrapping 1599it in a Clinic block lets Clinic use its existing checksum functionality to ensure 1600the file was not modified by hand before it gets overwritten. 1601 1602 1603The #ifdef trick 1604---------------------------------------------- 1605 1606If you're converting a function that isn't available on all platforms, 1607there's a trick you can use to make life a little easier. The existing 1608code probably looks like this:: 1609 1610 #ifdef HAVE_FUNCTIONNAME 1611 static module_functionname(...) 1612 { 1613 ... 1614 } 1615 #endif /* HAVE_FUNCTIONNAME */ 1616 1617And then in the ``PyMethodDef`` structure at the bottom the existing code 1618will have: 1619 1620.. code-block:: none 1621 1622 #ifdef HAVE_FUNCTIONNAME 1623 {'functionname', ... }, 1624 #endif /* HAVE_FUNCTIONNAME */ 1625 1626In this scenario, you should enclose the body of your impl function inside the ``#ifdef``, 1627like so:: 1628 1629 #ifdef HAVE_FUNCTIONNAME 1630 /*[clinic input] 1631 module.functionname 1632 ... 1633 [clinic start generated code]*/ 1634 static module_functionname(...) 1635 { 1636 ... 1637 } 1638 #endif /* HAVE_FUNCTIONNAME */ 1639 1640Then, remove those three lines from the ``PyMethodDef`` structure, 1641replacing them with the macro Argument Clinic generated:: 1642 1643 MODULE_FUNCTIONNAME_METHODDEF 1644 1645(You can find the real name for this macro inside the generated code. 1646Or you can calculate it yourself: it's the name of your function as defined 1647on the first line of your block, but with periods changed to underscores, 1648uppercased, and ``"_METHODDEF"`` added to the end.) 1649 1650Perhaps you're wondering: what if ``HAVE_FUNCTIONNAME`` isn't defined? 1651The ``MODULE_FUNCTIONNAME_METHODDEF`` macro won't be defined either! 1652 1653Here's where Argument Clinic gets very clever. It actually detects that the 1654Argument Clinic block might be deactivated by the ``#ifdef``. When that 1655happens, it generates a little extra code that looks like this:: 1656 1657 #ifndef MODULE_FUNCTIONNAME_METHODDEF 1658 #define MODULE_FUNCTIONNAME_METHODDEF 1659 #endif /* !defined(MODULE_FUNCTIONNAME_METHODDEF) */ 1660 1661That means the macro always works. If the function is defined, this turns 1662into the correct structure, including the trailing comma. If the function is 1663undefined, this turns into nothing. 1664 1665However, this causes one ticklish problem: where should Argument Clinic put this 1666extra code when using the "block" output preset? It can't go in the output block, 1667because that could be deactivated by the ``#ifdef``. (That's the whole point!) 1668 1669In this situation, Argument Clinic writes the extra code to the "buffer" destination. 1670This may mean that you get a complaint from Argument Clinic: 1671 1672.. code-block:: none 1673 1674 Warning in file "Modules/posixmodule.c" on line 12357: 1675 Destination buffer 'buffer' not empty at end of file, emptying. 1676 1677When this happens, just open your file, find the ``dump buffer`` block that 1678Argument Clinic added to your file (it'll be at the very bottom), then 1679move it above the ``PyMethodDef`` structure where that macro is used. 1680 1681 1682 1683Using Argument Clinic in Python files 1684------------------------------------- 1685 1686It's actually possible to use Argument Clinic to preprocess Python files. 1687There's no point to using Argument Clinic blocks, of course, as the output 1688wouldn't make any sense to the Python interpreter. But using Argument Clinic 1689to run Python blocks lets you use Python as a Python preprocessor! 1690 1691Since Python comments are different from C comments, Argument Clinic 1692blocks embedded in Python files look slightly different. They look like this: 1693 1694.. code-block:: python3 1695 1696 #/*[python input] 1697 #print("def foo(): pass") 1698 #[python start generated code]*/ 1699 def foo(): pass 1700 #/*[python checksum:...]*/ 1701