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CheeseShop

Examples of using PyO3 Rust bindings for Python with little to no silliness. For detailed documentation, see the PyO3 user guide. This project uses the current version (0.19.2) as of 2023-09-11.

Getting Started

  • Create your library project: $ cargo new --lib CheeseShop

Update your Cargo.toml:

[lib]
name = "CheeseShop"
crate-type = ["cdylib"]

[dependencies]
pyo3 = { version = "0.19.2", features = ["extension-module"] }

Here, name sets the name of the output library. In Linux, this compiles to libCheeseShop.so. This must be renamed to CheeseShop.so, which lets you import CheeseShop in Python.

Running Code in This Project

There's an example_usage.py file that invokes the Rust methods. For example:

from CheeseShop import *
>>> do_something()
['And', 'now', 'for', 'something', 'completely', 'different']
>>> movies()
[('Monty Python and the Holy Grail', 1975), ('Life of Brian', 1979), ('The Meaning of Life', 1983)]

Writing Rust functions

Some simple examples of Rust functions that become available in Python:

use pyo3::prelude::*;

#[pyfunction]
/// Does something completely different by returning a Python `List[str]`.
fn do_something() -> Vec<&'static str> {
    "And now for something completely different"
        .split(" ")
        .collect()
}

#[pyfunction]
/// A module-level function that simply returns tuples of movies and their release year.
fn movies() -> Vec<(String, u16)> {
    vec![
        ("Monty Python and the Holy Grail".to_string(), 1975),
        ("Life of Brian".to_string(), 1979),
        ("The Meaning of Life".to_string(), 1983),
    ]
}

#[pymodule]
fn CheeseShop(_py: Python, m: &PyModule) -> PyResult<()> {
    m.add_wrapped(wrap_pyfunction!(do_something))?;
    m.add_wrapped(wrap_pyfunction!(movies))?;
}

The /// Rust doc comments turn into Python docstrings, so calling help(movies) for the above function will show you this in the Python REPL:

Help on built-in function movies:

movies()
    A module-level function that simply returns tuples of movies and their release year.

Attributes

PyO3 provides numerous attributes for conveniently mapping your Rust code to comparable Python functionality:

Python Classes

  • #[pyclass] marks a struct (or fieldless enum) as a Python class
  • #[pymethods] marks one impl block for that struct (or enum). Functions/methods are generally accessible in Python, and they don't need pub modifiers on them.
  • #[new] makes a Rust function (within the pymethods block) into the __init__ constructor for a class
  • Magic (or sometimes called 'dunder') methods are declared like other methods. Your implementation will need the approprate number and type of arguments and return values; for example:
    • fn __setattr__(&self) {} will fail to compile with the error, Expected 2 arguments, got 0 because setattr requires two inputs.
    • fn __setattr__(&self, name: i32, value: i32) {} will fail at runtime with the error, argument 'name': 'str' object cannot be interpreted as an integer because the name argument is of an incorrect type
    • fn __setattr__(&self, name: i32, value: i32) -> bool {} will fail to compile because this magic method is expected to have no return value (or, technically, unit).
  • #[staticmethod] marks an associated Rust function as being a Python static method

Signatures

By default, methods and functions have basic help documentation that includes argument names. You can use #[pyo3(text_signature = "...")] to override this auto-generated text; the provided string is arbitrary and is simply appended to the end of the function name; it is expected that your text_signature encloses argumens in parentheses; eg, (name: str, age: int = None).

To supply your own default values, to handle *args and **kwargs, and more, use #[pyo3(signature = (...))]. The argument names in this attribute must match the names used in the Rust function it annotates, and the default values (if provided) must be valid Rust code that corresponds to theinput type.

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