| 
           | 
        
          Boost.PythonConfiguration | 
      
Boost.Python uses several configuration macros in <boost/config.hpp>, as well as configuration macros meant to be supplied by the application. These macros are documented here.
These are the macros that may be defined by an application using Boost.Python. Note that if you extend a strict interpretation of the C++ standard to cover dynamic libraries, using different values of these macros when compiling different libraries (including extension modules and the Boost.Python library itself) is a violation of the ODR. However, we know of no C++ implementations on which this particular violation is detectable or causes any problems.
| Macro | Default | Meaning | 
|---|---|---|
BOOST_PYTHON_MAX_ARITY | 
        15 | The maximum arity of any function, member function,
        or constructor to be wrapped, invocation of a Boost.Python
        function wich is specified as taking arguments
        x1, x2,...Xn. This includes, in
        particular, callback mechanisms such as object::operator()(...)
        or call_method<R>(...
        ). | 
      
BOOST_PYTHON_MAX_BASES | 
        10 | The maximum number of template arguments to the
        bases<...>
        class template, which is used to specify the bases of a wrapped C++
        class.. | 
      
BOOST_PYTHON_STATIC_MODULE | 
        not defined | If defined, prevents your module initialization function from being treated as an exported symbol on platforms which support that distinction in-code | 
These macros are defined by Boost.Python and are implementation details of interest only to implementors and those porting to new platforms.
| Macro | Default | Meaning | 
|---|---|---|
BOOST_PYTHON_TYPE_ID_NAME | 
        not defined | If defined, this indicates that the type_info
        comparison across shared library boundaries does not work on this
        platform. In other words, if shared-lib-1 passes
        typeid(T) to a function in shared-lib-2 which compares
        it to typeid(T), that comparison may return
        false. If this macro is #defined, Boost.Python uses and
        compares typeid(T).name() instead of using and comparing
        the std::type_info objects directly. | 
      
Revised 7 January, 2003
© Copyright Dave Abrahams 2002.