Skip to main content

Seamless operability between C++11 and Python

Project description

pybind11 logo

pybind11 — Seamless operability between C++11 and Python

Latest Documentation Status Stable Documentation Status Gitter chat GitHub Discussions CI Build status

Repology PyPI package Conda-forge Python Versions

Setuptools exampleScikit-build exampleCMake example

pybind11 is a lightweight header-only library that exposes C++ types in Python and vice versa, mainly to create Python bindings of existing C++ code. Its goals and syntax are similar to the excellent Boost.Python library by David Abrahams: to minimize boilerplate code in traditional extension modules by inferring type information using compile-time introspection.

The main issue with Boost.Python—and the reason for creating such a similar project—is Boost. Boost is an enormously large and complex suite of utility libraries that works with almost every C++ compiler in existence. This compatibility has its cost: arcane template tricks and workarounds are necessary to support the oldest and buggiest of compiler specimens. Now that C++11-compatible compilers are widely available, this heavy machinery has become an excessively large and unnecessary dependency.

Think of this library as a tiny self-contained version of Boost.Python with everything stripped away that isn’t relevant for binding generation. Without comments, the core header files only require ~4K lines of code and depend on Python (3.6+, or PyPy) and the C++ standard library. This compact implementation was possible thanks to some of the new C++11 language features (specifically: tuples, lambda functions and variadic templates). Since its creation, this library has grown beyond Boost.Python in many ways, leading to dramatically simpler binding code in many common situations.

Tutorial and reference documentation is provided at pybind11.readthedocs.io. A PDF version of the manual is available here. And the source code is always available at github.com/pybind/pybind11.

Core features

pybind11 can map the following core C++ features to Python:

  • Functions accepting and returning custom data structures per value, reference, or pointer

  • Instance methods and static methods

  • Overloaded functions

  • Instance attributes and static attributes

  • Arbitrary exception types

  • Enumerations

  • Callbacks

  • Iterators and ranges

  • Custom operators

  • Single and multiple inheritance

  • STL data structures

  • Smart pointers with reference counting like std::shared_ptr

  • Internal references with correct reference counting

  • C++ classes with virtual (and pure virtual) methods can be extended in Python

Goodies

In addition to the core functionality, pybind11 provides some extra goodies:

  • Python 3.6+, and PyPy3 7.3 are supported with an implementation-agnostic interface (pybind11 2.9 was the last version to support Python 2 and 3.5).

  • It is possible to bind C++11 lambda functions with captured variables. The lambda capture data is stored inside the resulting Python function object.

  • pybind11 uses C++11 move constructors and move assignment operators whenever possible to efficiently transfer custom data types.

  • It’s easy to expose the internal storage of custom data types through Pythons’ buffer protocols. This is handy e.g. for fast conversion between C++ matrix classes like Eigen and NumPy without expensive copy operations.

  • pybind11 can automatically vectorize functions so that they are transparently applied to all entries of one or more NumPy array arguments.

  • Python’s slice-based access and assignment operations can be supported with just a few lines of code.

  • Everything is contained in just a few header files; there is no need to link against any additional libraries.

  • Binaries are generally smaller by a factor of at least 2 compared to equivalent bindings generated by Boost.Python. A recent pybind11 conversion of PyRosetta, an enormous Boost.Python binding project, reported a binary size reduction of 5.4x and compile time reduction by 5.8x.

  • Function signatures are precomputed at compile time (using constexpr), leading to smaller binaries.

  • With little extra effort, C++ types can be pickled and unpickled similar to regular Python objects.

Supported compilers

  1. Clang/LLVM 3.3 or newer (for Apple Xcode’s clang, this is 5.0.0 or newer)

  2. GCC 4.8 or newer

  3. Microsoft Visual Studio 2017 or newer

  4. Intel classic C++ compiler 18 or newer (ICC 20.2 tested in CI)

  5. Cygwin/GCC (previously tested on 2.5.1)

  6. NVCC (CUDA 11.0 tested in CI)

  7. NVIDIA PGI (20.9 tested in CI)

About

This project was created by Wenzel Jakob. Significant features and/or improvements to the code were contributed by Jonas Adler, Lori A. Burns, Sylvain Corlay, Eric Cousineau, Aaron Gokaslan, Ralf Grosse-Kunstleve, Trent Houliston, Axel Huebl, @hulucc, Yannick Jadoul, Sergey Lyskov Johan Mabille, Tomasz Miąsko, Dean Moldovan, Ben Pritchard, Jason Rhinelander, Boris Schäling, Pim Schellart, Henry Schreiner, Ivan Smirnov, Boris Staletic, and Patrick Stewart.

We thank Google for a generous financial contribution to the continuous integration infrastructure used by this project.

Contributing

See the contributing guide for information on building and contributing to pybind11.

License

pybind11 is provided under a BSD-style license that can be found in the LICENSE file. By using, distributing, or contributing to this project, you agree to the terms and conditions of this license.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

pybind11-2.10.1.tar.gz (195.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

pybind11-2.10.1-py3-none-any.whl (216.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file pybind11-2.10.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: pybind11-2.10.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 195.9 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.1 CPython/3.9.15

File hashes

Hashes for pybind11-2.10.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 c9571b8a6607c8e90ea156a2a455383b9911f89da414e9f5e251ab58dc3e3c71
MD5 0b181dbb44c3cc632e724cef5081cae1
BLAKE2b-256 2f23aaf147a5bc31c8be286f07d862b3699d7b49e3411fb75087525b5c31ab3e

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file pybind11-2.10.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: pybind11-2.10.1-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 216.1 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.1 CPython/3.9.15

File hashes

Hashes for pybind11-2.10.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ebf3eeac46859a2e10077ae45378ba3f33d999a9064697a3464fba1a4a04fc0a
MD5 feca7a6f7edb3ca3c188ab71befba489
BLAKE2b-256 1d53e6b27f3596278f9dd1d28ef1ddb344fd0cd5db98ef2179d69a2044e11897

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page