1.. highlightlang:: c 2 3.. _arg-parsing: 4 5Parsing arguments and building values 6===================================== 7 8These functions are useful when creating your own extensions functions and 9methods. Additional information and examples are available in 10:ref:`extending-index`. 11 12The first three of these functions described, :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple`, 13:c:func:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords`, and :c:func:`PyArg_Parse`, all use *format 14strings* which are used to tell the function about the expected arguments. The 15format strings use the same syntax for each of these functions. 16 17----------------- 18Parsing arguments 19----------------- 20 21A format string consists of zero or more "format units." A format unit 22describes one Python object; it is usually a single character or a parenthesized 23sequence of format units. With a few exceptions, a format unit that is not a 24parenthesized sequence normally corresponds to a single address argument to 25these functions. In the following description, the quoted form is the format 26unit; the entry in (round) parentheses is the Python object type that matches 27the format unit; and the entry in [square] brackets is the type of the C 28variable(s) whose address should be passed. 29 30Strings and buffers 31------------------- 32 33These formats allow accessing an object as a contiguous chunk of memory. 34You don't have to provide raw storage for the returned unicode or bytes 35area. 36 37In general, when a format sets a pointer to a buffer, the buffer is 38managed by the corresponding Python object, and the buffer shares 39the lifetime of this object. You won't have to release any memory yourself. 40The only exceptions are ``es``, ``es#``, ``et`` and ``et#``. 41 42However, when a :c:type:`Py_buffer` structure gets filled, the underlying 43buffer is locked so that the caller can subsequently use the buffer even 44inside a :c:type:`Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS` block without the risk of mutable data 45being resized or destroyed. As a result, **you have to call** 46:c:func:`PyBuffer_Release` after you have finished processing the data (or 47in any early abort case). 48 49Unless otherwise stated, buffers are not NUL-terminated. 50 51Some formats require a read-only :term:`bytes-like object`, and set a 52pointer instead of a buffer structure. They work by checking that 53the object's :c:member:`PyBufferProcs.bf_releasebuffer` field is *NULL*, 54which disallows mutable objects such as :class:`bytearray`. 55 56.. note:: 57 58 For all ``#`` variants of formats (``s#``, ``y#``, etc.), the type of 59 the length argument (int or :c:type:`Py_ssize_t`) is controlled by 60 defining the macro :c:macro:`PY_SSIZE_T_CLEAN` before including 61 :file:`Python.h`. If the macro was defined, length is a 62 :c:type:`Py_ssize_t` rather than an :c:type:`int`. This behavior will change 63 in a future Python version to only support :c:type:`Py_ssize_t` and 64 drop :c:type:`int` support. It is best to always define :c:macro:`PY_SSIZE_T_CLEAN`. 65 66 67``s`` (:class:`str`) [const char \*] 68 Convert a Unicode object to a C pointer to a character string. 69 A pointer to an existing string is stored in the character pointer 70 variable whose address you pass. The C string is NUL-terminated. 71 The Python string must not contain embedded null code points; if it does, 72 a :exc:`ValueError` exception is raised. Unicode objects are converted 73 to C strings using ``'utf-8'`` encoding. If this conversion fails, a 74 :exc:`UnicodeError` is raised. 75 76 .. note:: 77 This format does not accept :term:`bytes-like objects 78 <bytes-like object>`. If you want to accept 79 filesystem paths and convert them to C character strings, it is 80 preferable to use the ``O&`` format with :c:func:`PyUnicode_FSConverter` 81 as *converter*. 82 83 .. versionchanged:: 3.5 84 Previously, :exc:`TypeError` was raised when embedded null code points 85 were encountered in the Python string. 86 87``s*`` (:class:`str` or :term:`bytes-like object`) [Py_buffer] 88 This format accepts Unicode objects as well as bytes-like objects. 89 It fills a :c:type:`Py_buffer` structure provided by the caller. 90 In this case the resulting C string may contain embedded NUL bytes. 91 Unicode objects are converted to C strings using ``'utf-8'`` encoding. 92 93``s#`` (:class:`str`, read-only :term:`bytes-like object`) [const char \*, int or :c:type:`Py_ssize_t`] 94 Like ``s*``, except that it doesn't accept mutable objects. 95 The result is stored into two C variables, 96 the first one a pointer to a C string, the second one its length. 97 The string may contain embedded null bytes. Unicode objects are converted 98 to C strings using ``'utf-8'`` encoding. 99 100``z`` (:class:`str` or ``None``) [const char \*] 101 Like ``s``, but the Python object may also be ``None``, in which case the C 102 pointer is set to *NULL*. 103 104``z*`` (:class:`str`, :term:`bytes-like object` or ``None``) [Py_buffer] 105 Like ``s*``, but the Python object may also be ``None``, in which case the 106 ``buf`` member of the :c:type:`Py_buffer` structure is set to *NULL*. 107 108``z#`` (:class:`str`, read-only :term:`bytes-like object` or ``None``) [const char \*, int] 109 Like ``s#``, but the Python object may also be ``None``, in which case the C 110 pointer is set to *NULL*. 111 112``y`` (read-only :term:`bytes-like object`) [const char \*] 113 This format converts a bytes-like object to a C pointer to a character 114 string; it does not accept Unicode objects. The bytes buffer must not 115 contain embedded null bytes; if it does, a :exc:`ValueError` 116 exception is raised. 117 118 .. versionchanged:: 3.5 119 Previously, :exc:`TypeError` was raised when embedded null bytes were 120 encountered in the bytes buffer. 121 122``y*`` (:term:`bytes-like object`) [Py_buffer] 123 This variant on ``s*`` doesn't accept Unicode objects, only 124 bytes-like objects. **This is the recommended way to accept 125 binary data.** 126 127``y#`` (read-only :term:`bytes-like object`) [const char \*, int] 128 This variant on ``s#`` doesn't accept Unicode objects, only bytes-like 129 objects. 130 131``S`` (:class:`bytes`) [PyBytesObject \*] 132 Requires that the Python object is a :class:`bytes` object, without 133 attempting any conversion. Raises :exc:`TypeError` if the object is not 134 a bytes object. The C variable may also be declared as :c:type:`PyObject\*`. 135 136``Y`` (:class:`bytearray`) [PyByteArrayObject \*] 137 Requires that the Python object is a :class:`bytearray` object, without 138 attempting any conversion. Raises :exc:`TypeError` if the object is not 139 a :class:`bytearray` object. The C variable may also be declared as :c:type:`PyObject\*`. 140 141``u`` (:class:`str`) [const Py_UNICODE \*] 142 Convert a Python Unicode object to a C pointer to a NUL-terminated buffer of 143 Unicode characters. You must pass the address of a :c:type:`Py_UNICODE` 144 pointer variable, which will be filled with the pointer to an existing 145 Unicode buffer. Please note that the width of a :c:type:`Py_UNICODE` 146 character depends on compilation options (it is either 16 or 32 bits). 147 The Python string must not contain embedded null code points; if it does, 148 a :exc:`ValueError` exception is raised. 149 150 .. versionchanged:: 3.5 151 Previously, :exc:`TypeError` was raised when embedded null code points 152 were encountered in the Python string. 153 154 .. deprecated-removed:: 3.3 4.0 155 Part of the old-style :c:type:`Py_UNICODE` API; please migrate to using 156 :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsWideCharString`. 157 158``u#`` (:class:`str`) [const Py_UNICODE \*, int] 159 This variant on ``u`` stores into two C variables, the first one a pointer to a 160 Unicode data buffer, the second one its length. This variant allows 161 null code points. 162 163 .. deprecated-removed:: 3.3 4.0 164 Part of the old-style :c:type:`Py_UNICODE` API; please migrate to using 165 :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsWideCharString`. 166 167``Z`` (:class:`str` or ``None``) [const Py_UNICODE \*] 168 Like ``u``, but the Python object may also be ``None``, in which case the 169 :c:type:`Py_UNICODE` pointer is set to *NULL*. 170 171 .. deprecated-removed:: 3.3 4.0 172 Part of the old-style :c:type:`Py_UNICODE` API; please migrate to using 173 :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsWideCharString`. 174 175``Z#`` (:class:`str` or ``None``) [const Py_UNICODE \*, int] 176 Like ``u#``, but the Python object may also be ``None``, in which case the 177 :c:type:`Py_UNICODE` pointer is set to *NULL*. 178 179 .. deprecated-removed:: 3.3 4.0 180 Part of the old-style :c:type:`Py_UNICODE` API; please migrate to using 181 :c:func:`PyUnicode_AsWideCharString`. 182 183``U`` (:class:`str`) [PyObject \*] 184 Requires that the Python object is a Unicode object, without attempting 185 any conversion. Raises :exc:`TypeError` if the object is not a Unicode 186 object. The C variable may also be declared as :c:type:`PyObject\*`. 187 188``w*`` (read-write :term:`bytes-like object`) [Py_buffer] 189 This format accepts any object which implements the read-write buffer 190 interface. It fills a :c:type:`Py_buffer` structure provided by the caller. 191 The buffer may contain embedded null bytes. The caller have to call 192 :c:func:`PyBuffer_Release` when it is done with the buffer. 193 194``es`` (:class:`str`) [const char \*encoding, char \*\*buffer] 195 This variant on ``s`` is used for encoding Unicode into a character buffer. 196 It only works for encoded data without embedded NUL bytes. 197 198 This format requires two arguments. The first is only used as input, and 199 must be a :c:type:`const char\*` which points to the name of an encoding as a 200 NUL-terminated string, or *NULL*, in which case ``'utf-8'`` encoding is used. 201 An exception is raised if the named encoding is not known to Python. The 202 second argument must be a :c:type:`char\*\*`; the value of the pointer it 203 references will be set to a buffer with the contents of the argument text. 204 The text will be encoded in the encoding specified by the first argument. 205 206 :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple` will allocate a buffer of the needed size, copy the 207 encoded data into this buffer and adjust *\*buffer* to reference the newly 208 allocated storage. The caller is responsible for calling :c:func:`PyMem_Free` to 209 free the allocated buffer after use. 210 211``et`` (:class:`str`, :class:`bytes` or :class:`bytearray`) [const char \*encoding, char \*\*buffer] 212 Same as ``es`` except that byte string objects are passed through without 213 recoding them. Instead, the implementation assumes that the byte string object uses 214 the encoding passed in as parameter. 215 216``es#`` (:class:`str`) [const char \*encoding, char \*\*buffer, int \*buffer_length] 217 This variant on ``s#`` is used for encoding Unicode into a character buffer. 218 Unlike the ``es`` format, this variant allows input data which contains NUL 219 characters. 220 221 It requires three arguments. The first is only used as input, and must be a 222 :c:type:`const char\*` which points to the name of an encoding as a 223 NUL-terminated string, or *NULL*, in which case ``'utf-8'`` encoding is used. 224 An exception is raised if the named encoding is not known to Python. The 225 second argument must be a :c:type:`char\*\*`; the value of the pointer it 226 references will be set to a buffer with the contents of the argument text. 227 The text will be encoded in the encoding specified by the first argument. 228 The third argument must be a pointer to an integer; the referenced integer 229 will be set to the number of bytes in the output buffer. 230 231 There are two modes of operation: 232 233 If *\*buffer* points a *NULL* pointer, the function will allocate a buffer of 234 the needed size, copy the encoded data into this buffer and set *\*buffer* to 235 reference the newly allocated storage. The caller is responsible for calling 236 :c:func:`PyMem_Free` to free the allocated buffer after usage. 237 238 If *\*buffer* points to a non-*NULL* pointer (an already allocated buffer), 239 :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple` will use this location as the buffer and interpret the 240 initial value of *\*buffer_length* as the buffer size. It will then copy the 241 encoded data into the buffer and NUL-terminate it. If the buffer is not large 242 enough, a :exc:`ValueError` will be set. 243 244 In both cases, *\*buffer_length* is set to the length of the encoded data 245 without the trailing NUL byte. 246 247``et#`` (:class:`str`, :class:`bytes` or :class:`bytearray`) [const char \*encoding, char \*\*buffer, int \*buffer_length] 248 Same as ``es#`` except that byte string objects are passed through without recoding 249 them. Instead, the implementation assumes that the byte string object uses the 250 encoding passed in as parameter. 251 252Numbers 253------- 254 255``b`` (:class:`int`) [unsigned char] 256 Convert a nonnegative Python integer to an unsigned tiny int, stored in a C 257 :c:type:`unsigned char`. 258 259``B`` (:class:`int`) [unsigned char] 260 Convert a Python integer to a tiny int without overflow checking, stored in a C 261 :c:type:`unsigned char`. 262 263``h`` (:class:`int`) [short int] 264 Convert a Python integer to a C :c:type:`short int`. 265 266``H`` (:class:`int`) [unsigned short int] 267 Convert a Python integer to a C :c:type:`unsigned short int`, without overflow 268 checking. 269 270``i`` (:class:`int`) [int] 271 Convert a Python integer to a plain C :c:type:`int`. 272 273``I`` (:class:`int`) [unsigned int] 274 Convert a Python integer to a C :c:type:`unsigned int`, without overflow 275 checking. 276 277``l`` (:class:`int`) [long int] 278 Convert a Python integer to a C :c:type:`long int`. 279 280``k`` (:class:`int`) [unsigned long] 281 Convert a Python integer to a C :c:type:`unsigned long` without 282 overflow checking. 283 284``L`` (:class:`int`) [long long] 285 Convert a Python integer to a C :c:type:`long long`. 286 287``K`` (:class:`int`) [unsigned long long] 288 Convert a Python integer to a C :c:type:`unsigned long long` 289 without overflow checking. 290 291``n`` (:class:`int`) [Py_ssize_t] 292 Convert a Python integer to a C :c:type:`Py_ssize_t`. 293 294``c`` (:class:`bytes` or :class:`bytearray` of length 1) [char] 295 Convert a Python byte, represented as a :class:`bytes` or 296 :class:`bytearray` object of length 1, to a C :c:type:`char`. 297 298 .. versionchanged:: 3.3 299 Allow :class:`bytearray` objects. 300 301``C`` (:class:`str` of length 1) [int] 302 Convert a Python character, represented as a :class:`str` object of 303 length 1, to a C :c:type:`int`. 304 305``f`` (:class:`float`) [float] 306 Convert a Python floating point number to a C :c:type:`float`. 307 308``d`` (:class:`float`) [double] 309 Convert a Python floating point number to a C :c:type:`double`. 310 311``D`` (:class:`complex`) [Py_complex] 312 Convert a Python complex number to a C :c:type:`Py_complex` structure. 313 314Other objects 315------------- 316 317``O`` (object) [PyObject \*] 318 Store a Python object (without any conversion) in a C object pointer. The C 319 program thus receives the actual object that was passed. The object's reference 320 count is not increased. The pointer stored is not *NULL*. 321 322``O!`` (object) [*typeobject*, PyObject \*] 323 Store a Python object in a C object pointer. This is similar to ``O``, but 324 takes two C arguments: the first is the address of a Python type object, the 325 second is the address of the C variable (of type :c:type:`PyObject\*`) into which 326 the object pointer is stored. If the Python object does not have the required 327 type, :exc:`TypeError` is raised. 328 329.. _o_ampersand: 330 331``O&`` (object) [*converter*, *anything*] 332 Convert a Python object to a C variable through a *converter* function. This 333 takes two arguments: the first is a function, the second is the address of a C 334 variable (of arbitrary type), converted to :c:type:`void \*`. The *converter* 335 function in turn is called as follows:: 336 337 status = converter(object, address); 338 339 where *object* is the Python object to be converted and *address* is the 340 :c:type:`void\*` argument that was passed to the :c:func:`PyArg_Parse\*` function. 341 The returned *status* should be ``1`` for a successful conversion and ``0`` if 342 the conversion has failed. When the conversion fails, the *converter* function 343 should raise an exception and leave the content of *address* unmodified. 344 345 If the *converter* returns ``Py_CLEANUP_SUPPORTED``, it may get called a 346 second time if the argument parsing eventually fails, giving the converter a 347 chance to release any memory that it had already allocated. In this second 348 call, the *object* parameter will be NULL; *address* will have the same value 349 as in the original call. 350 351 .. versionchanged:: 3.1 352 ``Py_CLEANUP_SUPPORTED`` was added. 353 354``p`` (:class:`bool`) [int] 355 Tests the value passed in for truth (a boolean **p**\ redicate) and converts 356 the result to its equivalent C true/false integer value. 357 Sets the int to ``1`` if the expression was true and ``0`` if it was false. 358 This accepts any valid Python value. See :ref:`truth` for more 359 information about how Python tests values for truth. 360 361 .. versionadded:: 3.3 362 363``(items)`` (:class:`tuple`) [*matching-items*] 364 The object must be a Python sequence whose length is the number of format units 365 in *items*. The C arguments must correspond to the individual format units in 366 *items*. Format units for sequences may be nested. 367 368It is possible to pass "long" integers (integers whose value exceeds the 369platform's :const:`LONG_MAX`) however no proper range checking is done --- the 370most significant bits are silently truncated when the receiving field is too 371small to receive the value (actually, the semantics are inherited from downcasts 372in C --- your mileage may vary). 373 374A few other characters have a meaning in a format string. These may not occur 375inside nested parentheses. They are: 376 377``|`` 378 Indicates that the remaining arguments in the Python argument list are optional. 379 The C variables corresponding to optional arguments should be initialized to 380 their default value --- when an optional argument is not specified, 381 :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple` does not touch the contents of the corresponding C 382 variable(s). 383 384``$`` 385 :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords` only: 386 Indicates that the remaining arguments in the Python argument list are 387 keyword-only. Currently, all keyword-only arguments must also be optional 388 arguments, so ``|`` must always be specified before ``$`` in the format 389 string. 390 391 .. versionadded:: 3.3 392 393``:`` 394 The list of format units ends here; the string after the colon is used as the 395 function name in error messages (the "associated value" of the exception that 396 :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple` raises). 397 398``;`` 399 The list of format units ends here; the string after the semicolon is used as 400 the error message *instead* of the default error message. ``:`` and ``;`` 401 mutually exclude each other. 402 403Note that any Python object references which are provided to the caller are 404*borrowed* references; do not decrement their reference count! 405 406Additional arguments passed to these functions must be addresses of variables 407whose type is determined by the format string; these are used to store values 408from the input tuple. There are a few cases, as described in the list of format 409units above, where these parameters are used as input values; they should match 410what is specified for the corresponding format unit in that case. 411 412For the conversion to succeed, the *arg* object must match the format 413and the format must be exhausted. On success, the 414:c:func:`PyArg_Parse\*` functions return true, otherwise they return 415false and raise an appropriate exception. When the 416:c:func:`PyArg_Parse\*` functions fail due to conversion failure in one 417of the format units, the variables at the addresses corresponding to that 418and the following format units are left untouched. 419 420API Functions 421------------- 422 423.. c:function:: int PyArg_ParseTuple(PyObject *args, const char *format, ...) 424 425 Parse the parameters of a function that takes only positional parameters into 426 local variables. Returns true on success; on failure, it returns false and 427 raises the appropriate exception. 428 429 430.. c:function:: int PyArg_VaParse(PyObject *args, const char *format, va_list vargs) 431 432 Identical to :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple`, except that it accepts a va_list rather 433 than a variable number of arguments. 434 435 436.. c:function:: int PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords(PyObject *args, PyObject *kw, const char *format, char *keywords[], ...) 437 438 Parse the parameters of a function that takes both positional and keyword 439 parameters into local variables. The *keywords* argument is a 440 *NULL*-terminated array of keyword parameter names. Empty names denote 441 :ref:`positional-only parameters <positional-only_parameter>`. 442 Returns true on success; on failure, it returns false and raises the 443 appropriate exception. 444 445 .. versionchanged:: 3.6 446 Added support for :ref:`positional-only parameters 447 <positional-only_parameter>`. 448 449 450.. c:function:: int PyArg_VaParseTupleAndKeywords(PyObject *args, PyObject *kw, const char *format, char *keywords[], va_list vargs) 451 452 Identical to :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords`, except that it accepts a 453 va_list rather than a variable number of arguments. 454 455 456.. c:function:: int PyArg_ValidateKeywordArguments(PyObject *) 457 458 Ensure that the keys in the keywords argument dictionary are strings. This 459 is only needed if :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords` is not used, since the 460 latter already does this check. 461 462 .. versionadded:: 3.2 463 464 465.. XXX deprecated, will be removed 466.. c:function:: int PyArg_Parse(PyObject *args, const char *format, ...) 467 468 Function used to deconstruct the argument lists of "old-style" functions --- 469 these are functions which use the :const:`METH_OLDARGS` parameter parsing 470 method, which has been removed in Python 3. This is not recommended for use 471 in parameter parsing in new code, and most code in the standard interpreter 472 has been modified to no longer use this for that purpose. It does remain a 473 convenient way to decompose other tuples, however, and may continue to be 474 used for that purpose. 475 476 477.. c:function:: int PyArg_UnpackTuple(PyObject *args, const char *name, Py_ssize_t min, Py_ssize_t max, ...) 478 479 A simpler form of parameter retrieval which does not use a format string to 480 specify the types of the arguments. Functions which use this method to retrieve 481 their parameters should be declared as :const:`METH_VARARGS` in function or 482 method tables. The tuple containing the actual parameters should be passed as 483 *args*; it must actually be a tuple. The length of the tuple must be at least 484 *min* and no more than *max*; *min* and *max* may be equal. Additional 485 arguments must be passed to the function, each of which should be a pointer to a 486 :c:type:`PyObject\*` variable; these will be filled in with the values from 487 *args*; they will contain borrowed references. The variables which correspond 488 to optional parameters not given by *args* will not be filled in; these should 489 be initialized by the caller. This function returns true on success and false if 490 *args* is not a tuple or contains the wrong number of elements; an exception 491 will be set if there was a failure. 492 493 This is an example of the use of this function, taken from the sources for the 494 :mod:`_weakref` helper module for weak references:: 495 496 static PyObject * 497 weakref_ref(PyObject *self, PyObject *args) 498 { 499 PyObject *object; 500 PyObject *callback = NULL; 501 PyObject *result = NULL; 502 503 if (PyArg_UnpackTuple(args, "ref", 1, 2, &object, &callback)) { 504 result = PyWeakref_NewRef(object, callback); 505 } 506 return result; 507 } 508 509 The call to :c:func:`PyArg_UnpackTuple` in this example is entirely equivalent to 510 this call to :c:func:`PyArg_ParseTuple`:: 511 512 PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O|O:ref", &object, &callback) 513 514 515--------------- 516Building values 517--------------- 518 519.. c:function:: PyObject* Py_BuildValue(const char *format, ...) 520 521 Create a new value based on a format string similar to those accepted by the 522 :c:func:`PyArg_Parse\*` family of functions and a sequence of values. Returns 523 the value or *NULL* in the case of an error; an exception will be raised if 524 *NULL* is returned. 525 526 :c:func:`Py_BuildValue` does not always build a tuple. It builds a tuple only if 527 its format string contains two or more format units. If the format string is 528 empty, it returns ``None``; if it contains exactly one format unit, it returns 529 whatever object is described by that format unit. To force it to return a tuple 530 of size 0 or one, parenthesize the format string. 531 532 When memory buffers are passed as parameters to supply data to build objects, as 533 for the ``s`` and ``s#`` formats, the required data is copied. Buffers provided 534 by the caller are never referenced by the objects created by 535 :c:func:`Py_BuildValue`. In other words, if your code invokes :c:func:`malloc` 536 and passes the allocated memory to :c:func:`Py_BuildValue`, your code is 537 responsible for calling :c:func:`free` for that memory once 538 :c:func:`Py_BuildValue` returns. 539 540 In the following description, the quoted form is the format unit; the entry in 541 (round) parentheses is the Python object type that the format unit will return; 542 and the entry in [square] brackets is the type of the C value(s) to be passed. 543 544 The characters space, tab, colon and comma are ignored in format strings (but 545 not within format units such as ``s#``). This can be used to make long format 546 strings a tad more readable. 547 548 ``s`` (:class:`str` or ``None``) [const char \*] 549 Convert a null-terminated C string to a Python :class:`str` object using ``'utf-8'`` 550 encoding. If the C string pointer is *NULL*, ``None`` is used. 551 552 ``s#`` (:class:`str` or ``None``) [const char \*, int] 553 Convert a C string and its length to a Python :class:`str` object using ``'utf-8'`` 554 encoding. If the C string pointer is *NULL*, the length is ignored and 555 ``None`` is returned. 556 557 ``y`` (:class:`bytes`) [const char \*] 558 This converts a C string to a Python :class:`bytes` object. If the C 559 string pointer is *NULL*, ``None`` is returned. 560 561 ``y#`` (:class:`bytes`) [const char \*, int] 562 This converts a C string and its lengths to a Python object. If the C 563 string pointer is *NULL*, ``None`` is returned. 564 565 ``z`` (:class:`str` or ``None``) [const char \*] 566 Same as ``s``. 567 568 ``z#`` (:class:`str` or ``None``) [const char \*, int] 569 Same as ``s#``. 570 571 ``u`` (:class:`str`) [const wchar_t \*] 572 Convert a null-terminated :c:type:`wchar_t` buffer of Unicode (UTF-16 or UCS-4) 573 data to a Python Unicode object. If the Unicode buffer pointer is *NULL*, 574 ``None`` is returned. 575 576 ``u#`` (:class:`str`) [const wchar_t \*, int] 577 Convert a Unicode (UTF-16 or UCS-4) data buffer and its length to a Python 578 Unicode object. If the Unicode buffer pointer is *NULL*, the length is ignored 579 and ``None`` is returned. 580 581 ``U`` (:class:`str` or ``None``) [const char \*] 582 Same as ``s``. 583 584 ``U#`` (:class:`str` or ``None``) [const char \*, int] 585 Same as ``s#``. 586 587 ``i`` (:class:`int`) [int] 588 Convert a plain C :c:type:`int` to a Python integer object. 589 590 ``b`` (:class:`int`) [char] 591 Convert a plain C :c:type:`char` to a Python integer object. 592 593 ``h`` (:class:`int`) [short int] 594 Convert a plain C :c:type:`short int` to a Python integer object. 595 596 ``l`` (:class:`int`) [long int] 597 Convert a C :c:type:`long int` to a Python integer object. 598 599 ``B`` (:class:`int`) [unsigned char] 600 Convert a C :c:type:`unsigned char` to a Python integer object. 601 602 ``H`` (:class:`int`) [unsigned short int] 603 Convert a C :c:type:`unsigned short int` to a Python integer object. 604 605 ``I`` (:class:`int`) [unsigned int] 606 Convert a C :c:type:`unsigned int` to a Python integer object. 607 608 ``k`` (:class:`int`) [unsigned long] 609 Convert a C :c:type:`unsigned long` to a Python integer object. 610 611 ``L`` (:class:`int`) [long long] 612 Convert a C :c:type:`long long` to a Python integer object. 613 614 ``K`` (:class:`int`) [unsigned long long] 615 Convert a C :c:type:`unsigned long long` to a Python integer object. 616 617 ``n`` (:class:`int`) [Py_ssize_t] 618 Convert a C :c:type:`Py_ssize_t` to a Python integer. 619 620 ``c`` (:class:`bytes` of length 1) [char] 621 Convert a C :c:type:`int` representing a byte to a Python :class:`bytes` object of 622 length 1. 623 624 ``C`` (:class:`str` of length 1) [int] 625 Convert a C :c:type:`int` representing a character to Python :class:`str` 626 object of length 1. 627 628 ``d`` (:class:`float`) [double] 629 Convert a C :c:type:`double` to a Python floating point number. 630 631 ``f`` (:class:`float`) [float] 632 Convert a C :c:type:`float` to a Python floating point number. 633 634 ``D`` (:class:`complex`) [Py_complex \*] 635 Convert a C :c:type:`Py_complex` structure to a Python complex number. 636 637 ``O`` (object) [PyObject \*] 638 Pass a Python object untouched (except for its reference count, which is 639 incremented by one). If the object passed in is a *NULL* pointer, it is assumed 640 that this was caused because the call producing the argument found an error and 641 set an exception. Therefore, :c:func:`Py_BuildValue` will return *NULL* but won't 642 raise an exception. If no exception has been raised yet, :exc:`SystemError` is 643 set. 644 645 ``S`` (object) [PyObject \*] 646 Same as ``O``. 647 648 ``N`` (object) [PyObject \*] 649 Same as ``O``, except it doesn't increment the reference count on the object. 650 Useful when the object is created by a call to an object constructor in the 651 argument list. 652 653 ``O&`` (object) [*converter*, *anything*] 654 Convert *anything* to a Python object through a *converter* function. The 655 function is called with *anything* (which should be compatible with :c:type:`void 656 \*`) as its argument and should return a "new" Python object, or *NULL* if an 657 error occurred. 658 659 ``(items)`` (:class:`tuple`) [*matching-items*] 660 Convert a sequence of C values to a Python tuple with the same number of items. 661 662 ``[items]`` (:class:`list`) [*matching-items*] 663 Convert a sequence of C values to a Python list with the same number of items. 664 665 ``{items}`` (:class:`dict`) [*matching-items*] 666 Convert a sequence of C values to a Python dictionary. Each pair of consecutive 667 C values adds one item to the dictionary, serving as key and value, 668 respectively. 669 670 If there is an error in the format string, the :exc:`SystemError` exception is 671 set and *NULL* returned. 672 673.. c:function:: PyObject* Py_VaBuildValue(const char *format, va_list vargs) 674 675 Identical to :c:func:`Py_BuildValue`, except that it accepts a va_list 676 rather than a variable number of arguments. 677