Revision 2 as of 2002-12-12 18:52:19

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Memory consumption

In general, a wrapped C++ object with a corresponding Python object is the size of:

You can see this in boost/python/object/instance.hpp. Most Python objects are represented by instance<value_holder<T> >, for some C++ class T.

All the code for implementing C++ object wrappers is in libs/python/src/object/class.cpp.

Instance dictionaries are created only "on demand", the first time the instance's dict attribute is accessed (see instance_get_dict).

    >>> a = A()  # some extension class A, no instance dict
    >>> a.x      # Attribute lookup fails, still no instance dict
    Traceback ...

    >>> a.y = 1  # y is a C++ data member, still no instance dict
    >>> a.x = 1  # creates an instance dict
    >>> z = A()
    >>> z.__dict__  # also creates an instance dict

If your C++ data structure contains pointers or smart pointers, you can arrange for Python objects to be created which only embed those pointers (instance<pointer_holder<Ptr> >). These Python objects will be in existence only as long as your Python code holds a reference to them.

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