- 19 November 2004 - 1.32 release
-
- Updated to use the Boost Software License.
- A new, better method of wrapping classes with virtual functions has been implemented.
- Support for upcoming GCC symbol export control features have been folded in, thanks to Niall Douglas.
- Improved support for
std::auto_ptr
-like types.
- The Visual C++ bug that makes top-level cv-qualification of function parameter types part of the function type has been worked around.
- Components used by other libraries have been moved out of
python/detail
and into boost/detail
to improve dependency relationships.
- Miscellaneous bug fixes and compiler workarounds.
- 8 Sept 2004
-
Support for Python's Bool type, thanks to Daniel Holth.
- 11 Sept 2003
-
- Changed the response to multiple to-python converters being
registered for the same type from a hard error into warning;
Boost.Python now reports the offending type in the message.
- Added builtin
std::wstring
conversions
- Added
std::out_of_range
=> Python
IndexError
exception conversion, thanks to Raoul Gough
- 9 Sept 2003
- Added new
str
- constructors which take a range of characters, allowing strings
containing nul (
'\0'
) characters.
- 8 Sept 2003
- Added the ability to create methods from function objects (with an
operator()
); see the make_function docs for
more info.
- 10 August 2003
- Added the new
properties
unit tests contributed by Roman Yakovenko and documented
add_static_property
at his urging.
- 1 August 2003
-
Added the new
arg
class contributed by Nikolay Mladenov which supplies the
ability to wrap functions that can be called with ommitted arguments
in the middle:
void f(int x = 0, double y = 3.14, std::string z = std::string("foo"));
BOOST_PYTHON_MODULE(test)
{
def("f", f
, (arg("x", 0), arg("y", 3.14), arg("z", "foo")));
}
And in Python:
>>> import test
>>> f(0, z = "bar")
>>> f(z = "bar", y = 0.0)
Thanks, Nikolay!
- 22 July 2003
- Killed the dreaded "bad argument type for builtin operation" error.
Argument errors now show the actual and expected argument types!
- 19 July 2003
- Added the new
return_arg
policy from Nikolay Mladenov. Thanks,
Nikolay!
- 18 March, 2003
- Gottfried
Ganßauge has contributed opaque pointer support.
Bruno da Silva de Oliveira
has contributed the exciting Pyste
("Pie-steh") package.
- 24 February 2003
- Finished improved support for
boost::shared_ptr
. Now
any wrapped object of C++ class X
can be converted
automatically to shared_ptr<X>
, regardless of how it
was wrapped. The shared_ptr
will manage the lifetime of
the Python object which supplied the X
, rather than just
the X
object itself, and when such a
shared_ptr
is converted back to Python, the original
Python object will be returned.
- 19 January 2003
- Integrated
staticmethod
support from Nikolay Mladenov. Thanks,
Nikolay!
- 29 December 2002
- Added Visual Studio project file and instructions from Brett
Calcott. Thanks, Brett!
- 20 December 2002
- Added automatic downcasting for pointers, references, and smart
pointers to polymorphic class types upon conversion to python
- 18 December 2002
- Optimized from_python conversions for wrapped classes by putting
the conversion logic in the shared library instead of registering
separate converters for each class in each extension module
- 19 November 2002
- Removed the need for users to cast base class member function
pointers when used as arguments to add_property
- 13 December 2002
- Allow exporting of
enum_
values into enclosing
scope
.
Fixed unsigned integer conversions to deal correctly with numbers that
are out-of-range of signed long
.
- 14 November 2002
- Auto-detection of class data members wrapped with
make_getter
- 13 November 2002
- Full Support for
std::auto_ptr<>
added.
- October 2002
- Ongoing updates and improvements to tutorial documentation
- 10 October 2002
- Boost.Python V2 is released!