Rubicon-ObjC is a bridge between Objective C and Python. It enables you to:
- Use Python to instantiate objects defined in Objective C,
- Use Python to invoke methods on objects defined in Objective C, and
- Subclass and extend Objective C classes in Python.
It also includes wrappers of the some key data types from the Core Foundation framework (e.g., NSString).
Rubicon uses a combination of ctypes, plus Objective-C's own reflection APIs, to enable Objective C objects to be referenced in a Python process.
To install Rubicon, use pip:
$ pip install rubicon-objc
Then, in a Python shell
>>> from ctypes import cdll
>>> from ctypes import util
>>> from rubicon.objc import ObjCClass, objc_method
# Use ctypes to import a framework into the Python process
>>> cdll.LoadLibrary(util.find_library('Foundation'))
# Wrap an Objective C class contained in the framework
>>> NSURL = ObjCClass("NSURL")
# Then instantiate the Objective C class, using the API
# that is exposed through Objective C. The Python method name
# is the concatenated version of the Objective C method descriptor,
# with colons replaced with underscores. So, the equivalent of
# [NSURL URLWithString:@"http://pybee.org"];
# would be:
>>> NSURL.URLWithString_("http://pybee.org/")
# To create a new Objective C class, define a Python class that
# has the methods you want to define, decorate it to indicate that it
# should be exposed to the Objective C runtime, and annotate it to
# describe the type of any arguments that aren't of type ``id``:
>>> class Handler(NSObject):
... @objc_method
... def initWithValue_(self, v: int):
... self.value = v
... return self
...
... @objc_method
... def pokeWithValue_(self, v: int) -> None:
... print ("Poking with", v)
... print ("Internal value is", self.value)
# Then use the class:
>>> my_handler = Handler.alloc().initWithValue_(42)
>>> my_handler.pokeWithValue_(37)
To run the Rubicon test suite:
1. Compile the Rubicon test library. A Makefile
has been provided to make
this easy. Type:
$ make
to compile it.
Cross platform support
This Makefile currently only works under OS/X; however, the build commands
aren't complicated; it should be fairly easy to reproduce the build on other
platforms. Pull requests to make the Makefile
cross-platform are welcome.
Put the Rubicon support library somewhere that it will be found by dynamic library discovery. This means:
- Under OS X, put the
tests/objc
directory in yourDYLD_LIBRARY_PATH
- Under Linux, put the
tests/objc
directory in yourLD_LIBRARY_PATH
- Under Windows.... something :-)
- Under OS X, put the
Run the test suite:
$ python setup.py test
A
tox
configuration has also been provided; to run the tests across all supported platforms, run:$ tox
Rubicon is part of the BeeWare suite. You can talk to the community through:
- @pybeeware on Twitter
- The BeeWare Users Mailing list, for questions about how to use the BeeWare suite.
- The BeeWare Developers Mailing list, for discussing the development of new features in the BeeWare suite, and ideas for new tools for the suite.
If you experience problems with this backend, log them on GitHub. If you want to contribute code, please fork the code and submit a pull request.