- 14 Aug, 2016 1 commit
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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- 13 Aug, 2016 34 commits
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
The format strings that are known at compile time are now accessible via both ::value and ::format(), and format strings for everything else is accessible via ::format(). This makes it backwards compatible.
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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Ivan Smirnov authored
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- 12 Aug, 2016 1 commit
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Jason Rhinelander authored
This allows exposing a dict-like interface to python code, allowing iteration over keys via: for k in custommapping: ... while still allowing iteration over pairs, so that you can also implement 'dict.items()' functionality which returns a pair iterator, allowing: for k, v in custommapping.items(): ... example-sequences-and-iterators is updated with a custom class providing both types of iteration.
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- 11 Aug, 2016 2 commits
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Wenzel Jakob authored
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Jason Rhinelander authored
This commit rewrites the examples that look for constructor/destructor calls to do so via static variable tracking rather than output parsing. The added ConstructorStats class provides methods to keep track of constructors and destructors, number of default/copy/move constructors, and number of copy/move assignments. It also provides a mechanism for storing values (e.g. for value construction), and then allows all of this to be checked at the end of a test by getting the statistics for a C++ (or python mapping) class. By not relying on the precise pattern of constructions/destructions, but rather simply ensuring that every construction is matched with a destruction on the same object, we ensure that everything that gets created also gets destroyed as expected. This replaces all of the various "std::cout << whatever" code in constructors/destructors with `print_created(this)`/`print_destroyed(this)`/etc. functions which provide similar output, but now has a unified format across the different examples, including a new ### prefix that makes mixed example output and lifecycle events easier to distinguish. With this change, relaxed mode is no longer needed, which enables testing for proper destruction under MSVC, and under any other compiler that generates code calling extra constructors, or optimizes away any constructors. GCC/clang are used as the baseline for move constructors; the tests are adapted to allow more move constructors to be evoked (but other types are constructors much have matching counts). This commit also disables output buffering of tests, as the buffering sometimes results in C++ output ending up in the middle of python output (or vice versa), depending on the OS/python version.
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- 10 Aug, 2016 1 commit
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Jason Rhinelander authored
reference_internal requires an `instance` field to track the returned reference's parent, but that's just a duplication of what keep_alive<0,1> does, so use a keep alive to do this to eliminate the duplication.
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- 09 Aug, 2016 1 commit
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Jason Rhinelander authored
The pointer to the first member of a class instance is the same as the pointer to instance itself; pybind11 has some workarounds for this to not track registered instances that have a registered parent with the same address. This doesn't work everywhere, however: issue #328 is a failure of this for a mutator operator which resolves its argument to the parent rather than the child, as is needed in #328. This commit resolves the issue (and restores tracking of same-address instances) by changing registered_instances from an unordered_map to an unordered_multimap that allows duplicate instances for the same pointer to be recorded, then resolves these differences by checking the type of each matched instance when looking up an instance. (A unordered_multimap seems cleaner for this than a unordered_map<list> or similar because, the vast majority of the time, the instance will be unique).
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