My guess is you'd restrict it only to .NET objects which are marked as being serializable. Then you'd ask the object to serialize it's self and then stuff that into the pickle stream along w/ the extra Python info. That's probably include a type name which you'd just load and see what you got - much like how cPickle does an import and uses what it gets when it's loading a global.
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Curt Hagenlocher Sent: Wednesday, March 26, 2008 8:31 AM To: Discussion of IronPython Subject: Re: [IronPython] Question about serialization This is an interesting problem. Python's pickle writes out enough data to rebuild the object entirely -- including the class definition, if the object is a user-defined type. How do you accurately write out a class definition for a C# base class? Would you restrict it to strongly named classes? On Wed, Mar 26, 2008 at 4:55 AM, Paul Turbett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote: Thanks Michael for the advice. Must appreciated. Unfortunately I hasn't worked out yet tho :( I can use pickle from C# using Evaluate, or from within a Python class, on a "pure" Python object. However any attempt at pickling a python object that derives from a C# base result in an exception like this: Cannot convert MyObject(<MyObject object at 0x000000000000002B>) to Int32 Exploring further, I came across Ops.GetDynamicType() and Ops.GetAttrsNames() which I thought might be helpful to get the attributes of an object and serialize it somehow (manually), but GetAttrNames requires an ICallerContext, and I can't see how to get one of those. It seems that whilst serializing .NET classes is trivial, and serializing python classes is trivial, serializing something that touches both is proving quite difficult. Any further suggestions gratefully received! Thanks, Paul Michael Foord wrote: Paul Turbett wrote: Hi, I'm using IP as a scripting engine in a C# app. I have various Python classes that derive from a C# base class, and have there own additional data & functionality. I would like to be able to serialize instances of the Python classes from the C# host for persistence across sessions. Using the standard BinaryFormatter with the Serializable attribute is not working - I get an error about the python class not being marked as serializable (the C# base class is marked as serializable though). How can I serialize python objects from C#? Should I use reflection to roll my own serializer, or is there something in one of the lesser documented assemblies like Ops I should use? Typically for serializing Python objects you would use pickle [1]. The 'dumps' function returns a string (make sure you use the text protocol for IronPython). You could then execute code inside the Python engine to serialize / deserialize objects. I've not tried this for instances that inherit from C# base classes - but it should work fine. :-) Michael Foord http://www.ironpythoninaction.com<http://www.ironpythoninaction.com/> .. [1] http://docs.python.org/lib/module-pickle.html I'm using IP 1.1.1 (but will move to 2.0 if that will help). Any pointers & advice greatly appreciated! Thanks, Paul _______________________________________________ Users mailing list Users@lists.ironpython.com<mailto:Users@lists.ironpython.com> http://lists.ironpython.com/listinfo.cgi/users-ironpython.com _______________________________________________ Users mailing list Users@lists.ironpython.com<mailto:Users@lists.ironpython.com> http://lists.ironpython.com/listinfo.cgi/users-ironpython.com _______________________________________________ Users mailing list Users@lists.ironpython.com<mailto:Users@lists.ironpython.com> http://lists.ironpython.com/listinfo.cgi/users-ironpython.com
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