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Objc_util wants incorrect number of parameters
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thanks, will try that and get back to you if it works
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It’s actually looking quite hard, how do I set a type I don’t have a reference to, I looked in the docs and it’s in a framework called simd
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it is probably an array of doubles. you need to print out the .encoding.
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@ellie_ff1493 I tried, without success, this
import objc_util from objc_util import * import ctypes objc_util.load_framework("GameplayKit") GKNoise = objc_util.ObjCClass("GKNoise") GKNoiseMap = objc_util.ObjCClass("GKNoiseMap") GKPerlinNoiseSource = objc_util.ObjCClass('GKPerlinNoiseSource') class vector_double2 (ctypes.Structure): _fields_ = [('x', ctypes.c_float), ('y', ctypes.c_float)] class vector_int2 (ctypes.Structure): _fields_ = [('x', ctypes.c_int), ('y', ctypes.c_int)] noiseSource = GKPerlinNoiseSource.alloc().init() noiseSource.frequency = 1 noiseSource.octaveCount = 6 noiseSource.lacunarity = 2 noiseSource.persistence = 0.5 noise = GKNoise.alloc().initWithNoiseSource(noiseSource)#make the noise algorithem print('initWithNoise_size_origin_sampleCount_seamless_' in dir(GKNoiseMap.alloc()))#is what im calling valid newMap = GKNoiseMap.alloc().initWithNoise_(noise) # only to know parameters types print(dir(newMap)) print(newMap.size()) print(dir(newMap.origin())) print(newMap.sampleCount()) print(newMap.isSeamless()) size = vector_double2(10.0,10.0) origin = vector_double2(0.0,0.0) #origin = newMap.origin() #print(dir(origin)) #print(type(origin)) sampleCount = vector_int2(10,10) newMap = GKNoiseMap.alloc().initWithNoise_size_origin_sampleCount_seamless_(noise, size, origin, sampleCount, True, restype=GKNoiseMap, argtypes=[GKNoise, ctypes.POINTER(vector_double2), ctypes.POINTER(vector_double2), ctypes.POINTER(vector_int2), c_bool]) row = [] for x in range(10): col = [] for y in range(10): col.append(newMap.interpolatedValueAtPosition_(position=(x/10,y/10))) row.append(col) print(row) print()
I got error
Traceback (most recent call last): File "/private/var/mobile/Containers/Shared/AppGroup/668A7D98-7216-47ED-917D-AA0B6173167E/Pythonista3/Documents/test4.py", line 43, in <module> newMap = GKNoiseMap.alloc().initWithNoise_size_origin_sampleCount_seamless_(noise, size, origin, sampleCount, True, restype=GKNoiseMap, argtypes=[GKNoise, ctypes.POINTER(vector_double2), c_void_p, ctypes.POINTER(vector_int2), c_bool]) File "/var/containers/Bundle/Application/FED7F8B2-4F86-4833-BCFB-C2F8803CD0F1/Pythonista3.app/Frameworks/Py3Kit.framework/pylib/site-packages/objc_util.py", line 892, in __call__ objc_msgSend.argtypes = argtypes TypeError: item 3 in _argtypes_ has no from_param method
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can someone please print the .encoding attribute of the function you want to call?
objc is self documenting, for the most part we don't have to guess what it wants.
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print(GKNoiseMap.alloc().initWithNoise_size_origin_sampleCount_seamless_.encoding)
Gives
b'@68@0:8@16244056B64'
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For your argtypes, first should be c_void_p, not GKNoise (that is what the error is saying. there are two hidden argtypes that get added, so your first is really the third... i think, i forget if you have to add the secret ones)
next, the signature calls for vectors, not pointers to the vectors. so remove POINTER. then your third arg is wrong... restype also should be c_void_p.
try this:
argtypes=[c_void_p, vector_double2, vector_double2, vector_int2, c_bool], restype=c_void_p
you might need to add two c_void_p's at the start --i forget if objc_util does that for you (for the hidden _self and selector arguments to objc_msgSend)
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@JonB Thanks as usual, how can I find an explanation of .encoding codes?
@ellie_ff1493 this worksimport objc_util from objc_util import * import ctypes objc_util.load_framework("GameplayKit") GKNoise = objc_util.ObjCClass("GKNoise") GKNoiseMap = objc_util.ObjCClass("GKNoiseMap") GKPerlinNoiseSource = objc_util.ObjCClass('GKPerlinNoiseSource') class vector_double2 (ctypes.Structure): _fields_ = [('x', ctypes.c_float), ('y', ctypes.c_float)] class vector_int2 (ctypes.Structure): _fields_ = [('x', ctypes.c_int), ('y', ctypes.c_int)] noiseSource = GKPerlinNoiseSource.alloc().init() noiseSource.frequency = 1 noiseSource.octaveCount = 6 noiseSource.lacunarity = 2 noiseSource.persistence = 0.5 noise = GKNoise.alloc().initWithNoiseSource(noiseSource)#make the noise algorithem size = vector_double2(10.0,10.0) origin = vector_double2(0.0,0.0) sampleCount = vector_int2(10,10) newMap = GKNoiseMap.alloc().initWithNoise_size_origin_sampleCount_seamless_(noise, size, origin, sampleCount, True, argtypes=[c_void_p, vector_double2, vector_double2, vector_int2, c_bool], restype=c_void_p) row = [] for x in range(10): col = [] for y in range(10): col.append(newMap.interpolatedValueAtPosition_(position=(x/10,y/10))) row.append(col) print(row) print()
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the encodings you get from introspection also have bytesize numbers after each character, which you can ignore.
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@JonB Thanks
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@cvp I tried the code you posted above, but it doesn't work for me. I just get an array in which all the values are -1.0 and can't seem to get anything else out of the noise map.
I am finding using objc_util frustrating. Under what circumstances do I need to use the .alloc() method on an object? To be fair the Apple documentation on these classes is terrible. Putting all the documentation on a class and it's methods and properties on a single page in a consistent format can't be all that hard.
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There is a difference between primitive ctypes structures and objc objects. If you are creating an objc object directly from a ObjCClass, with an init method, you need an alloc:
E.g.
ObjCClass('SomeClass').alloc().initWithParameter_(value)
Some classes provide ways of directly giving you an object, or giving you a pointer to a shared object. So
ObjCClass('SomeClass').someClassWithParameter_(param)
Or
ObjCClass('SomeClass').sharedSomeClass()
Also, .new() is short for .alloc().init().
So, if you are calling an init method you must use alloc. If not, not.
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@simon_hibbs the intent of my code was only to help @ellie_ff1493, I did not try to understand the code it-self, sorry. Perhaps he could help you
To check if a class needs alloc() or not, I first do
Print(dir(ObjCClass('SomeClass')))
and I see if alloc is in the list or not, then
Print(dir(ObjCClass('SomeClass').alloc()))
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@cvp Ok, thanks. very helpful.
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Thank you all, this thread has been so very useful.