Thanks Fredrik. Yes, I see now how the function works. I'm new to Python and the book I'm studying out of wasn't too explicit in how to handle arrays. I've changed the code to what you suggested, but strangely enough nothing got read into my array. If I return a single integer from my Python method, I get the expected return using: PyArg_Parse(return, "i", &integer); But, PyArg_Parse(return, "(iii)", array, array+1, array+2) and PyArg_Parse(return, "(iii)", &array[0], &array[1], &array[2]) does not alter "array" at all. Any ideas? Thanks
Fredrik Lundh wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > I am returning a tuple from my python method and am stuck trying to > > figure out how to read it into a C array using PyArg_Parse. > > My C Code: > > int array[3]; > > PyArg_Parse(return, "(iii)", &array); > > > > My Python Code: > > mytuple = (1,2,3) > > return mytuple > > > > That gives me a segmentation fault. What am I doing wrong? > > you're not providing enough arguments; "iii" means three pointers, not > one. try: > > PyArg_Parse(return, "(iii)", array, array+1, array+2) > > instead. or, if you prefer maximum clarity: > > PyArg_Parse(return, "(iii)", &array[0], &array[1], &array[2]) > > (I assume you left out the error handling code; ignoring the return value > from PyArg_Parse is not a good idea) > > </F> -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list