This documentation is a stub and needs more work, perhaps a written example + links to commits demonstrating in the commit history
It becomes necessary at times to expand the FreeCAD API further by exposing functions that are available in the source code in c++ to the python. In so doing, providing an ability to trigger deep internal functionality with Python in real-time instead of needing to compile.
Below is an explanation of how one can achieve this.
The basic structure of a program to expose functionality to Python is something like this:
- get the Py object parameters and convert them to c++ variables using PyArg_ParseTuple(),
- use various c++ routines from OpenCascade and/or FreeCAD to produce the desired result,
- convert the c++ result into Py object using routines like PyLong_AsLong(), Py::asObject(), etc,
- return the Py object.
There are two source files required to implement a new Python binding. Assuming we wanted to expose some methods from FreeCAD/src/Mod/Part/TopoShape.cpp, we would need to make:
- TopoShapePy.xml - definitions of the functions for be exposed in XML format. This file is used to generate header files for our next file...
- TopoShapePyImp.cpp - the actual C++ code that bridges from Python to C++.
These 2 files need to be added to ../Mod/yourModule/App/CMakeLists.txt. See FreeCAD/src/Mod/Part/App/CMakeLists.txt for an example.
You can extend the Python version of your module by adding to ../Mod/yourModule/App/AppmyModulePy.cpp (see FreeCAD/src/Mod/Part/AppPartPy.cpp). The additions are accessed in Python by "import myModule".
Note:
- xxxxxPyImp routines return a PyObject* pointer (see TopoShapePyImp.cpp)
- AppmyModulePy.cpp routines return a Py::Object (see FreeCAD/src/Mod/Part/AppPartPy.cpp).
- Source: https://forum.freecadweb.org/viewtopic.php?p=314796#p314617
- Forum discussion: Adding Commands in Python to C++ Workbench
- Another forum thread: https://forum.freecadweb.org/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=70750
- Workbench creation
⏵ documentation index > Exposing Cplusplus to Python