> On 7 Oct 2019, at 00:44, Ian Pilcher wrote:
>
> On 10/6/19 12:55 PM, Barry Scott wrote:
>> Then the answer to your question is simple. Do it in python and passt
>> logger into the C++ module.
>
> Funny thing, that's exactly where I started this journey. I couldn't
> figure out how to get t
On 10/7/19 2:09 AM, Barry Scott wrote:
I meant pass in the specific named logger that you C code will use.
Right, but I'm assuming that your C/C++ code will receive the logger
object by calling PyArg_ParseTuple (or similar), and I further assume
that you want to validate that the object actuall
> On 7 Oct 2019, at 00:44, Ian Pilcher wrote:
>
> On 10/6/19 12:55 PM, Barry Scott wrote:
>> Then the answer to your question is simple. Do it in python and passt
>> logger into the C++ module.
>
> Funny thing, that's exactly where I started this journey. I couldn't
> figure out how to get t
> On 7 Oct 2019, at 04:34, MRAB wrote:
>
> On 2019-10-07 00:38, Ian Pilcher wrote:
>> On 10/6/19 11:55 AM, MRAB wrote:
>> > Don't you already have the module's name? You have to specify it in the >
>> > PyModuleDef struct that you pass to PyModule_Create.
>>
>> I do. Perhaps I'm trying to b
On 2019-10-07 00:38, Ian Pilcher wrote:
On 10/6/19 11:55 AM, MRAB wrote:
> Don't you already have the module's name? You have to specify it in the
> PyModuleDef struct that you pass to PyModule_Create.
I do. Perhaps I'm trying to be too Pythonic, but there's so much advice
out there about usi
On 10/6/19 12:55 PM, Barry Scott wrote:
Then the answer to your question is simple. Do it in python and passt
logger into the C++ module.
Funny thing, that's exactly where I started this journey. I couldn't
figure out how to get the logging.Logger type object, so that I could
use a "O!" format
On 10/6/19 11:55 AM, MRAB wrote:
Don't you already have the module's name? You have to specify it in the
PyModuleDef struct that you pass to PyModule_Create.
I do. Perhaps I'm trying to be too Pythonic, but there's so much advice
out there about using getLogger(__name__) in Python code, rather
> On 5 Oct 2019, at 18:55, Ian Pilcher wrote:
>
> On 10/4/19 4:30 PM, Ian Pilcher wrote:
>> Ideally, I would pass my existing Logging.logger object into my C
>> function and use PyObject_CallMethod to call the appropriate method on
>> it (info, debug, etc.).
>
> As I've researched this furthe
On 2019-10-06 15:48, Ian Pilcher wrote:
On 10/5/19 12:55 PM, Ian Pilcher wrote:
This is straightforward, except that I cannot figure out how to retrieve
the __name__.
Making progress. I can get a __name__ value with:
PyDict_GetItemString(PyEval_GetGlobals(), "__name__")
I say "a __name_
On 10/5/19 12:55 PM, Ian Pilcher wrote:
This is straightforward, except that I cannot figure out how to retrieve
the __name__.
Making progress. I can get a __name__ value with:
PyDict_GetItemString(PyEval_GetGlobals(), "__name__")
I say "a __name__ value" because the returned value is actu
On 10/4/19 4:30 PM, Ian Pilcher wrote:
Ideally, I would pass my existing Logging.logger object into my C
function and use PyObject_CallMethod to call the appropriate method on
it (info, debug, etc.).
As I've researched this further, I've realized that this isn't the
correct approach.
My extens
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