source-engine/devtools/swigwin-1.3.34/Lib/python/pyopers.swg
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/* ------------------------------------------------------------
* Overloaded operator support
* ------------------------------------------------------------ */
#ifdef __cplusplus
#define %pybinoperator(pyname,oper) %rename(pyname) oper; %pythonmaybecall oper
%pybinoperator(__add__, *::operator+);
%pybinoperator(__pos__, *::operator+());
%pybinoperator(__pos__, *::operator+() const);
%pybinoperator(__sub__, *::operator-);
%pybinoperator(__neg__, *::operator-());
%pybinoperator(__neg__, *::operator-() const);
%pybinoperator(__mul__, *::operator*);
%pybinoperator(__div__, *::operator/);
%pybinoperator(__mod__, *::operator%);
%pybinoperator(__lshift__, *::operator<<);
%pybinoperator(__rshift__, *::operator>>);
%pybinoperator(__and__, *::operator&);
%pybinoperator(__or__, *::operator|);
%pybinoperator(__xor__, *::operator^);
%pybinoperator(__lt__, *::operator<);
%pybinoperator(__le__, *::operator<=);
%pybinoperator(__gt__, *::operator>);
%pybinoperator(__ge__, *::operator>=);
%pybinoperator(__eq__, *::operator==);
%pybinoperator(__ne__, *::operator!=);
/* Special cases */
%rename(__invert__) *::operator~;
%rename(__call__) *::operator();
/* Ignored operators */
%ignoreoperator(LNOT) operator!;
%ignoreoperator(LAND) operator&&;
%ignoreoperator(LOR) operator||;
%ignoreoperator(EQ) *::operator=;
%ignoreoperator(PLUSPLUS) *::operator++;
%ignoreoperator(MINUSMINUS) *::operator--;
%ignoreoperator(ARROWSTAR) *::operator->*;
%ignoreoperator(INDEX) *::operator[];
/*
Inplace operator declarations.
They translate the inplace C++ operators (+=, -=, ...) into the
corresponding python equivalents(__iadd__,__isub__), etc,
disabling the ownership of the input 'self' pointer, and assigning
it to the returning object:
%feature("del") *::Operator;
%feature("new") *::Operator;
This makes the most common case safe, ie:
A& A::operator+=(int i) { ...; return *this; }
^^^^ ^^^^^^
will work fine, even when the resulting python object shares the
'this' pointer with the input one. The input object is usually
deleted after the operation, including the shared 'this' pointer,
producing 'strange' seg faults, as reported by Lucriz
(lucriz@sitilandia.it).
If you have an interface that already takes care of that, ie, you
already are using inplace operators and you are not getting
seg. faults, with the new scheme you could end with 'free' elements
that never get deleted (maybe, not sure, it depends). But if that is
the case, you could recover the old behaviour using
%feature("del","") A::operator+=;
%feature("new","") A::operator+=;
which recovers the old behaviour for the class 'A', or if you are
100% sure your entire system works fine in the old way, use:
%feature("del","") *::operator+=;
%feature("new","") *::operator+=;
*/
#define %pyinplaceoper(PyOper, Oper) %delobject Oper; %newobject Oper; %rename(PyOper) Oper
%pyinplaceoper(__iadd__ , *::operator +=);
%pyinplaceoper(__isub__ , *::operator -=);
%pyinplaceoper(__imul__ , *::operator *=);
%pyinplaceoper(__idiv__ , *::operator /=);
%pyinplaceoper(__imod__ , *::operator %=);
%pyinplaceoper(__iand__ , *::operator &=);
%pyinplaceoper(__ior__ , *::operator |=);
%pyinplaceoper(__ixor__ , *::operator ^=);
%pyinplaceoper(__ilshift__, *::operator <<=);
%pyinplaceoper(__irshift__, *::operator >>=);
/* Finally, in python we need to mark the binary operations to fail as
'maybecall' methods */
#define %pybinopermaybecall(oper) %pythonmaybecall __ ## oper ## __; %pythonmaybecall __r ## oper ## __
%pybinopermaybecall(add);
%pybinopermaybecall(pos);
%pybinopermaybecall(pos);
%pybinopermaybecall(sub);
%pybinopermaybecall(neg);
%pybinopermaybecall(neg);
%pybinopermaybecall(mul);
%pybinopermaybecall(div);
%pybinopermaybecall(mod);
%pybinopermaybecall(lshift);
%pybinopermaybecall(rshift);
%pybinopermaybecall(and);
%pybinopermaybecall(or);
%pybinopermaybecall(xor);
%pybinopermaybecall(lt);
%pybinopermaybecall(le);
%pybinopermaybecall(gt);
%pybinopermaybecall(ge);
%pybinopermaybecall(eq);
%pybinopermaybecall(ne);
#endif