Hi Nat, Thank you very much for the reply. I tried making the target as ".pyd" and I am able to import it in Python script.
Thanks again. Regards, Raju. On Wed, Jun 6, 2012 at 6:57 PM, Nat Linden <n...@lindenlab.com> wrote: > On Wed, Jun 6, 2012 at 6:57 AM, Nagaraju <srirangamnagar...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > Thank you very much for your reply. I am sorry if I did not explain > > something clearly. > > > > I am doing as below after implementing the MyClass in the same file: > > > > BOOST_PYTHON_MODULE(hello){ > > ... > > } > > > > I am using CDLL from ctypes to load this Test.DLL. Say > > planet = CDLL("Test.DLL"). > > > > Now I want to create an object of MyClass and call add function. How can > I > > do this? > > I think you're mixing two different tactics here. > > You can use ctypes to load a plain DLL that publishes extern "C" > functions, and call those functions. But I don't believe it supports > the notion of a Python class defined in that DLL. > > Or you can use Boost.Python to prepare a special DLL that Python will > recognize as an extension module. Such modules can be loaded with > 'import'. In this case you don't use ctypes because the module > contents describe themselves for the Python runtime to know how to use > them directly, classes and methods and functions and data. > Boost.Python is a succinct way to provide such a description. > > But it's my belief that a DLL containing the description compiled from > BOOST_PYTHON_MODULE(hello) must be named "hello.pyd" for the Python > interpreter to successfully import it. > > Once you're able to import hello, you should be able to instantiate > hello.MyClass() and proceed from there. > _______________________________________________ > Cplusplus-sig mailing list > Cplusplus-sig@python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/cplusplus-sig >
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