Extending and Embedding the Python Interpreter — Python v2.7.2 documentation
Extending and Embedding the Python Interpreter¶
Release: 2.7 Date: February 23, 2012 This document describes how to write modules in C or C++ to extend the Python
interpreter with new modules. Those modules can define new functions but also
new object types and their methods. The document also describes how to embed
the Python interpreter in another application, for use as an extension language.
Finally, it shows how to compile and link extension modules so that they can be
loaded dynamically (at run time) into the interpreter, if the underlying
operating system supports this feature.This document assumes basic knowledge about Python. For an informal
introduction to the language, see The Python Tutorial. The Python Language Reference
gives a more formal definition of the language. The Python Standard Library documents
the existing object types, functions and modules (both built-in and written in
Python) that give the language its wide application range.For a detailed description of the whole Python/C API, see the separate
Python/C API Reference Manual.
- 1. Extending Python with C or C++
- 1.1. A Simple Example
- 1.2. Intermezzo: Errors and Exceptions
- 1.3. Back to the Example
- 1.4. The Module’s Method Table and Initialization Function
- 1.5. Compilation and Linkage
- 1.6. Calling Python Functions from C
- 1.7. Extracting Parameters in Extension Functions
- 1.8. Keyword Parameters for Extension Functions
- 1.9. Building Arbitrary Values
- 1.10. Reference Counts
- 1.11. Writing Extensions in C++
- 1.12. Providing a C API for an Extension Module
- 2. Defining New Types
- 3. Building C and C++ Extensions with distutils
- 4. Building C and C++ Extensions on Windows
- 5. Embedding Python in Another Application