Ok, class DataPack {
public: std::string name; }; BOOST_PYTHON_MODULE( Data) { class_<DataPack >("DataPack ") .def_readwrite("name", &DataPack ::name); } in my py file: d = Data.DataPack() d.name = "123456789101234567891012345678910" It works fine in xp but breaks application down in a vista installed computer memory corrupt if I set shorter string: d.name = "123" it is fine for vista too. = operator does not work as it does in c++ side, I think. On Fri, Oct 17, 2008 at 1:54 PM, Stefan Seefeld <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote: > Furkan Kuru wrote: > >> Hello, >> >> I have exported a struct containing a std::string field and used it one of >> my py files. >> I used same py and pyd file in another operating system (vista). >> It just stuck without giving any errors. >> I figured out that the std::string field gets a limited space (as it >> should do) >> but does not increase it when initialized or assigned with longer sequence >> of characters. >> >> Is it a "quick and good" solution to write a wrapper for std::string and >> set its reserved space a high number ( reserve(128); ) >> or >> >> export overloaded = operator to python side? >> > > Sorry, but it isn't clear at all what problem you are seeing. Can you > provide a concise description of what behavior you expect, and what you > actually get (together with a minimal but complete code snippet) ? In that > case someone on this list may be able to help you. > > Thanks, > Stefan > > > -- > > ...ich hab' noch einen Koffer in Berlin... > > _______________________________________________ > Cplusplus-sig mailing list > Cplusplus-sig@python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/cplusplus-sig > -- Furkan Kuru
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