NSArrayNSAutoreleasePoolNSCoderNSDataNSDecimalNumber and the NSDecimal typeNSDictionaryNSExceptionNSFaultNSIndexSetNSInvocationNSMutableArrayNSMutableStringNSNetServiceNSObjectNSScriptObjectSpecifierNSStringNSThreadTODO: Add documentation about weak linking (see intro.txt).
This document describes the restrictions with regard to supported APIs and classes on Mac OS X. In general, classes and global functions are used just as they are in Objective-C (e.g. the Apple developer documentation applies), but in some cases there are special considerations.
Global functions that are not useful for Python programs are not callable from Python, as listed below.
This document lists the exceptions to the basic rules. If a method uses pointers
to return additional values, the Python wrapper for that method returns a tuple
containing the original return value and the additional values. It is not necessary
to provide values for pointer arguments unless their initial value is used by the
method. Additionally, objc.NULL can be passed to denote that these arguments
should be NULL rather than a pointer to allocated memory.
This document is targeted at the latest supported version of Mac OS X (currently Mac OS X 10.4.x). Unless specifically noted, the same restrictions apply to earlier versions of Mac OS X. Earlier versions of Mac OS X have less extensive APIs, and PyObjC does not provide a compatibility layer except when necessary to support its own operation.
This document is not entirely complete, but does cover the most used APIs. Classes not mentioned in this document may very well work properly.
Frameworks that do not have PyObjC wrappers can be loaded at runtime using
the objc.loadBundle, objc.loadBundleFunctions and
objc.loadBundleVariables functions. In a future version of PyObjC,
there will be an Objective-C header parser that can be used to automate this
process and to generate wrappers.
The global functions in this framework are not wrapped, as the same functionality can be accessed by using the object-oriented interface.
The callback methods for the NSSheet API's have a non-default signature
and no fixed name. You should therefore explicitly specify the signature. This
is done by calling the endSheetMethod function after defining your
callback:
class MyClass(NSObject):
def mySheetDidEnd(self, panel, returnCode, contextInfo):
""" Actual implementation goes here """
pass
mySheetDidEnd = PyObjCTools.AppHelper.endSheetMethod(
mySheetDidEnd)
In Python 2.4, this may be written using a decorator as such:
class MyClass(NSObject):
@PyObjCTools.AppHelper.endSheetMethod
def mySheetDidEnd(self, panel, returnCode, contextInfo):
""" Actual implementation goes here """
pass
Unless otherwise noted, all contextInfo arguments are passed as integers,
not as arbitrary pointers.
NSModalSession objects are wrapped as opaque values. Two wrapper objects
refer to the same session object if their ptr attributes are equal.
getLineDash:count:phase:Use getLineDash_count_phase_(0) to get the length of the pattern, and
then use getLineDash_count_phase_(actualCount) to fetch all information.
Both return (pattern, actualCount, phase). The pattern is None
when the input argument is 0.
appendBezierPathWithGlyphs:count:inFont:The first argument is a list of integers, count should be at most the length of the first argument.
appendBezierPathWithPoints:count:The first argument is a list of points, count should be at most the length of the first argument.
setAssociatedPoints:atIndex:Implementing this method in Python is not yet supported.
NSBitmapImageRepgetBitMapDataPlanesThis method is not supported (yet)
getTIFFCompressionTypes:count:This method is not supported (yet)
initWithBitmapDataPlanes:pixesWide:pixelsHigh:bitsPerSample:samplesPerPixel:hasAlpha:isPlanar:colorSpaceName:bytesPerRow:bitsPerPixel:This method is not supported (yet)
NSFontpositionsForCompositeSequence:numberOfGlyphs:pointArray:This method is not supported (yet)
NSGraphicsContextfocusStackThis method is not supported.
setFocusStackThis method is not supported.
graphicsPortThis method is not yet supported, MacPython doesn't wrap CGContextRef
at the moment.
NSLayoutManagergetGlyphs:range:This method is not yet supported
getGlyphsInRange:glyphs:characterIndexes:glyphInscriptions:elasticBits:This method is not yet supported
getGlyphsInRange:glyphs:characterIndexes:glyphInscriptions:elasticBits:bidiLevels:This method is not yet supported
rectArrayForCharacterRange:withinSelectedCharacterRange:inTextContainer:rectCount:This method is not yet supported
rectArrayForGlyphRange:withinSelectedGlyphRange:inTextContainer:rectCount:This method is not yet supported
NSMatrixsortUsingFunction:context:Calling this method from Python is supported, overriding it in Python
is not. The context can be an arbitrary python object.
NSMovieThe return value of QTMovie and the sole argument of initWithMovie:
are Carbon.Qt.Movie objects.
NSOpenGLContextgetValues:forParameter:This method is not yet supported.
setValues:forParameter:This method is not yet supported.
setOffScreen:width:height:rowbytes:This method is not yet supported.
CGLContextObjThis method is not yet supported.
NSOpenGLPixelFormatgetValues:forAttribute:forVirtualScreen:This method is not yet supported
NSQuickDrawViewqdPortThis method returns an instance of type Carbon.Qd.GrafPort.
NSSimpleHorizontalTypesetterbaseOfTypesetterGlyphInfoThis method is not yet supported
layoutGlyphsInHorizontalLineFragment:baseline:This method is not yet supported
NSViewsortSubviewsUsingFunction:context:Calling this method from Python is supported, overriding it in Python
is not. The context can be an arbitrary python object.
NSWindowgraphicsPortThis method is not yet supported
initWithWindowRef:This method is not yet supported
windowRefThis method is not yet supported
NOTE: The list below is mostly based on scripts that find methods that can not be automatically handled by the bridge. We have not yet performed a manual search for such methods in the Cocoa documentation.
The -forward:: and performv:: methods are not supported. Normal Python
function invocation can be used instead.
Structs are wrapped using a struct-like type. Struct members can be accessed using the field names as attributes, or they can be accessed as sequences for backwards compatibility.
NSArraygetObjects:This method is not supported, accessing the objects using the usual accessor methods is just as efficient as using this method.
getObjects:inRange:This method is not supported, accessing the objects using the usual accessor methods is just as efficient as using this method.
sortedArrayUsingFunction:context: and sortedArrayUsingFunction:context:hintThese methods can be called from Python, but Python can not override them. This limitation will be lifted in a future version of PyObjC.
The context can be an arbitrary python object.
addObserver:toObjectsAtIndexes:forKeyPath:options:context:The context is an integer, not a void*.
NSAutoreleasePoolThe bridge automatically manages reference counts for you, but it is still required to make an autorelease pool available.
In single-threaded programs that use NSRunLoop or are not long-lived,
it is not necessary to explicitly manage NSAutoreleasePool, as
NSRunLoop will push and pop one for each iteration, and PyObjC creates
a NSAutoreleasePool in the thread it is imported in.
When creating a large amount of objects in a loop, it may be useful to manually create a pool to reclaim memory as soon as possible. The proper idiom for this is:
while <test>:
pool = NSAutoreleasePool.alloc().init()
# ... Do work here ...
del pool
The previous pool must be deallocated before a new one is created. For example, the code below will silently leak memory:
while <test>:
# This pool is allocated BEFORE the previous is
# garbage collected, so the stack grows!
pool = NSAutoreleasePool.alloc().init()
# ... Do work here ...
In threads other than the main thread, as with Objective-C applications, it
is necessary to create an NSAutoreleasePool as soon as possible before
using other Objective-C objects.
NSCoderThe following methods are not supported in the current version of PyObjC. This limitation will be lifted in a future version of the bridge.
encodeValuesOfObjCType:Use multiple calls to encodeValueOfObjCType:at: instead.
decodeValuesOfObjCType:Use multiple calls to decodeValueOfObjCType:at: instead.
Note that this will not read back data that was written using
encodeValuesOfObjCType:.
The method decodeBytesWithoutReturnedLength: is not supported, use
decodeBytesWithReturnedLength: instead. It is not possible to safely
represent the return value of this method in Python.
NSDataNSData subclasses support the Python buffer protocol, and any Python object that implements the Python buffer protocol (except str and unicode) are wrapped as an NSData subclass.
initWithBytesNoCopy:length:This method is not supported, use initWithBytes:length: instead.
initWithBytesNoCopy:length:freeWhenDone:This method is not supported, use initWithBytes:length: instead.
dataWithBytesNoCopy:length:This method is not supported, use dataWithBytes:length: instead.
dataWithBytesNoCopy:length:freeWhenDone:This method is not supported, use dataWithBytes:length: instead.
deserializeAlignedBytesLengthAtCursor:This is a deprecated method, see Apple documentation.
deserializeBytes:length:atCursor:This is a deprecated method, see Apple documentation.
deserializeDataAt:ofObjCType:atCursor:context:This is a deprecated method, see Apple documentation.
deserializeIntAtCursor:This is a deprecated method, see Apple documentation.
deserializeInts:count:atCursor:This is a deprecated method, see Apple documentation.
deserializeInts:count:atIndex:This is a deprecated method, see Apple documentation.
getBytes:, getBytes:length:, getBytes:range:Use bytes instead, and then use subscripting to get the
desired range.
NSDecimalNumber and the NSDecimal typeNSDecimal is wrapped by a Python type.
Creating an NSDecimal instance: NSDecimal(value) or
NSDecimal(mantisssa, exponent, isNegative). Value can be a string,
int or long (not a float because of the representation issues for floats).
Converting an NSDecimal to a float or int: aDecimal.as_int() and
aDecimal.as_float.
NSDictionaryThe (undocumented) methods getKeys:, getObjects: and
getObjects:andKeys: are not supported.
NSExceptionraise:format:, raise:format:arguments:These methods are not supported because they accept a variable number of
arguments. Use Python's % operator to format the message. A future
version of PyObjC may be able to parse format strings and do the right
thing.
NSFaultThe extraData argument/return value for -extraData and
setTargetClassextraData: is represented as an integer.
NSIndexSetgetIndexes:maxCount:inIndexRange:
The usage is:
(realCount, indices, newRange) = obj.getIndexes_maxCount_inIndexRange(
maxCount, inRange)
NSInvocationIn some versions of Mac OS X, NSInvocation doesn't work properly with structs
that contain padding for alignment. Such structs are not used in the Mac OS X API,
but may be present in 3rd party code. This leads to problems when
forwardInvocation: is used to call a method that has such a struct as one of
its arguments.
NSMutableArraysortUsingFunction:context:, sortUsingFunction:context:range:Calling this method from Python is supported, overriding it in a subclass is not. This limitation will be fixed in a later version of PyObjC.
The context can be an arbitrary Python object.
NSMutableStringappendFormat:This method is not supported because it accepts a variable number of
arguments. Use Python's % operator to format strings.
NSNetServiceaddressesWhen calling this from Python this methods returns a tuple of address info
tuples, like the values returned by socket.getpeeraddr().
NSObjectobservationInfo, setObservationInfo:These methods can be used from Python, but the observationInfo is
represented by an integer instead of void*. This probably makes it
impossible to do anything useful with these methods.
addObserver:forKeyPath:options:context:The context is an integer.
observeValueForKeyPath:ofObject:change:context:The context is an integer
methodForSelector:, instanceMethodForSelector:These methods return instances of objc.IMP. The major difference from
Objective-C is that the selector argument is omitted. In other words,
using an objc.IMP is the same as using an unbound selector; self
must be passed explicitly as the first argument, and the other arguments
are passed as usual.
WARNING: This interface is experimental and might change in a future version of PyObjC.
NSScriptObjectSpecifierindicesOfObjectsByEvaluatingWithContainer:count:Implementing this in Python is not supported yet. We're looking for a way to avoid leaking the returned buffer, as we cannot return a pointer to an internal data-structure.
NSStringObjective-C strings are represented as instances of a subclass of
the Python type unicode. Since Python unicode objects are immutable,
working with NSMutableString can be tricky. If you need to update the
Python representation of the string, use aString.self(), which will be a
new Python proxy for the same NSMutableString instance.
initWithCharactersNoCopy:length:freeWhenDone:This method is unsupported because we can not guarantee that the buffer will
be available as long as the string is. Use initWithCharacters: instead.
getCharacters: and getCharacters:range:These methods are not supported at the moment. This limitation will be lifted in a future version of the bridge.
getCString:maxLength:range:remainingRange: and getCString:maxLength:Calling these methods from Python is supported, overriding them from Python is not. This limitation will be lifted in a future version of the bridge.
getCString:This method is not supported. Use getCString:maxLength: instead (using
the length of the string as the maximum length). This limitation will be
lifted in a future version of the bridge.
stringWithFormat:, initWithFormat:, initWithFormat:locale:,
stringByAppendingFormat:These methods are not supported because they accept a variable number of
arbitrarily typed arguments. Use Python's % operator to format strings.
A future version of PyObjC may be able to parse format strings and do the
right thing here.
initWithFormat:arguments:, initWithFormat:locale:arguments:These are also not supported, with the same workaround.
NSThreadIt is safe to call from Objective-C to Python on any thread. It is safe to start new threads using the Python threading API and run non-Cocoa code on those threads.
detachNewThreadSelector:toTarget:withObject:As with Objective-C, make sure to create an NSAutoreleasePool in this
the detached thread.
I (Ronald) have not found documentation for this framework, therefore the following methods with a "difficult" signature are not supported.
Please let me know if there is documentation for this framework.
IBObjCSourceParserparseClass:NSViewobjectAtPoint:rect:Defined in a category on NSView.
NSIBObjectDatarestoreFromObjectDataInfo:snapshotIntoObjectDataInfo:IBObjectContainerdecodeObjectToIntMapTableForKey:fromCoder:alwaysCreate:decodeObjectToObjectMapTableForKey:fromCoder:alwaysCreate:IBXMLDecoderallocObjectWithClassName:IBSplitScrollViewgetMinimumX:maximumX:This framework seems to define useful classes like NSAuthorization and
NSKeychain, but these are not documented and some useful methods have
a hard signature.
The only documented class, NSPreferencePane, is fully supported.