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    This is the community forum for my apps Pythonista and Editorial.

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    Correct way to call Pythonista script from within a Shortcuts workflow?

    Pythonista
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    • mikeno
      mikeno last edited by mikeno

      Yes but only everyday, I want to read the value of the barometer sensor every hour, I can get this value with Pythonista. I didn’t find a way to get this information in shortcuts nor in JS (scriptable).
      I found also a way to do some tasks every hour in shortcuts but I don’t find a way to get the barometer sensor value.

      cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • cvp
        cvp @mikeno last edited by

        @mikeno said

        I found also a way to do some tasks every hour in shortcuts

        But you could start a Pythonista script every hour?

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • mikeno
          mikeno last edited by

          Yes, it works but only if the iPad is awake

          cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • cvp
            cvp @mikeno last edited by

            @mikeno did you try to run an automation at specified time, which runs a Pythonista short script logging the pressure in a file and put your IPad asleep some time before the specified time?

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • mikeno
              mikeno last edited by

              @cvp I’m not sure to understand what you mean, but calling a pythonista script from a shortcuts or an automation requires the iPad to be awake

              cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • cvp
                cvp @mikeno last edited by cvp

                @mikeno ok, I thought that calling the script from the shortcut did launch Pythonista even if iPad not awake. If you have Pyto, you could test because it runs really in background like a music player

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • mikeno
                  mikeno last edited by mikeno

                  I don’t know PyTo but I will try, thx in any case

                  cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • cvp
                    cvp @mikeno last edited by cvp

                    @mikeno not Py To but Pyto, I think there is a free test version

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • mikeno
                      mikeno last edited by

                      I just downloaded it but my trial period already expired because I probably already tried it some times ago and since I don’t know if it works, I don’t want to buy it. If you’ve it, could you try if it runs when iPad is asleep?

                      cvp 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • cvp
                        cvp @mikeno last edited by

                        @mikeno I'll do it and let it know

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • cvp
                          cvp @mikeno last edited by cvp

                          @mikeno I have tried a script which prints the time each second and closed my iPad cover during 200 seconds and when I have reopened it, the script was still running

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • mikeno
                            mikeno last edited by

                            Thx, the question is now if Pyto can read the barometer sensor value, below a short code which runs fine under Pythonista:

                            from objc_util import ObjCInstance, ObjCClass, ObjCBlock, c_void_p
                            
                            pressure = None
                            
                            def get_pressure():
                              
                              def handler(_cmd, _data, _error):
                                global pressure
                                pressure = ObjCInstance(_data).pressure()
                            
                              handler_block = ObjCBlock(handler, restype=None, argtypes=[c_void_p, c_void_p, c_void_p])
                            
                              CMAltimeter = ObjCClass('CMAltimeter')
                              NSOperationQueue = ObjCClass('NSOperationQueue')
                              if not CMAltimeter.isRelativeAltitudeAvailable():
                                print('This device has no barometer.')
                                return
                              altimeter = CMAltimeter.new()
                              main_q = NSOperationQueue.mainQueue()
                              altimeter.startRelativeAltitudeUpdatesToQueue_withHandler_(main_q, handler_block)
                              try:
                                while pressure is None:
                                  pass
                              finally:
                                altimeter.stopRelativeAltitudeUpdates()
                                #print('Updates stopped.')
                                return pressure.floatValue()*10
                            
                            pressure = get_pressure()
                            print(pressure)
                            
                            cvp 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • cvp
                              cvp @mikeno last edited by cvp

                              @mikeno I know this code but I'm new in Pyto and surely not (yet?) a specialist in ObjectiveC of Pyto.
                              I don't not yet know how to define an ObjcBlock in Pyto but I'll try.
                              But, obviously, I'll need some time

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • cvp
                                cvp @mikeno last edited by cvp

                                @mikeno Sorry, no idea how to define an ObjcBlock in rubicon (ObjectiveC in Pyto).
                                Hoping that @JonB will read this and be able to help, as usual.

                                # coding: utf-8
                                from rubicon.objc import *
                                from  ctypes import *
                                
                                def handler(_cmd, _data, _error):
                                    print(ObjCInstance(_data))
                                
                                handler_block = ObjCBlock(handler, None, [c_void_p, c_void_p, c_void_p])
                                
                                def main():
                                    CMAltimeter = ObjCClass('CMAltimeter')
                                    NSOperationQueue = ObjCClass('NSOperationQueue')
                                    if not CMAltimeter.isRelativeAltitudeAvailable():
                                        print('This device has no barometer.')
                                        return
                                    altimeter = CMAltimeter.new()
                                    main_q = NSOperationQueue.mainQueue
                                    altimeter.startRelativeAltitudeUpdatesToQueue_withHandler_(main_q, handler_block)
                                    print('Started altitude updates.')
                                    try:
                                        while True:
                                            pass
                                    finally:
                                        altimeter.stopRelativeAltitudeUpdates()
                                        print('Updates stopped.')
                                
                                if __name__ == '__main__':
                                    main()
                                

                                Gives

                                Traceback (most recent call last):
                                  File "iCloud/barometer.py", line 8, in <module>
                                    handler_block = ObjCBlock(handler, None, [c_void_p, c_void_p, c_void_p])
                                  File "Pyto.app/Lib/rubicon/objc/api.py", line 1834, in __init__
                                    self.struct = cast(self.pointer, POINTER(ObjCBlockStruct))
                                  File "Pyto.app/site-packages/python3.10/ctypes/__init__.py", line 510, in cast
                                    return _cast(obj, obj, typ)
                                ctypes.ArgumentError: argument 1: <class 'TypeError'>: wrong type
                                
                                JonB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • mikeno
                                  mikeno last edited by

                                  Thx for trying, I’ll wait!

                                  cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • JonB
                                    JonB @cvp last edited by JonB

                                    @cvp I believe in Rubicon, the preferred usage is via type annotations and decorators. Also ObjCBlock wraps ObjC blocks so they can be called in python, while Block wraps python so it is calls me in objc-- so you want plain old Block.

                                    I think the way you'd do it in Rubicon is:

                                    (Edited)

                                    @Block
                                    def handler(altitudeData: ObjCInstance, err:NSError) -> None:
                                        print(altitudeData)
                                    

                                    Or, I think you can skip the annotation on ObjCInstances:

                                    @Block
                                    def handler(altitudeData, err:NSError) -> None:
                                        print(altitudeData)
                                    
                                    cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • cvp
                                      cvp @JonB last edited by cvp

                                      @JonB problems
                                      1)

                                      @Block
                                      def handler(altitudeData , err:NSError) -> None:
                                          print(altitudeData)
                                      
                                      handler_block = ObjCBlock(handler, None, [c_void_p, c_void_p])
                                      

                                      Gives

                                      Traceback (most recent call last):
                                        File "iCloud/barometer.py", line 6, in <module>
                                          def handler(altitudeData, err:NSError) -> None:
                                      NameError: name 'NSError' is not defined. Did you mean 'OSError'?
                                      
                                      @Block
                                      def handler(altitudeData, err) -> None:
                                          print(altitudeData)
                                      
                                      handler_block = ObjCBlock(handler, None, [c_void_p, c_void_p])
                                      

                                      Gives

                                      Traceback (most recent call last):
                                        File "iCloud/barometer.py", line 6, in <module>
                                          def handler(altitudeData, err) -> None:
                                        File "Pyto.app/Lib/rubicon/objc/api.py", line 1939, in __init__
                                          raise ValueError(
                                      ValueError: Function has no argument type annotation for parameter 'altitudeData' - please add one, or
                                       pass return and argument types directly into Block
                                      
                                      @Block
                                      def handler(altitudeData:ObjCInstance, err:ObjCInstance) -> None:
                                         print(altitudeData)
                                      
                                      handler_block = ObjCBlock(handler, None, [c_void_p, c_void_p])
                                      

                                      Gives

                                      Traceback (most recent call last):
                                        File "iCloud/barometer.py", line 9, in <module>
                                          handler_block = ObjCBlock(handler, None, [c_void_p, c_void_p])
                                        File "Pyto.app/Lib/rubicon/objc/api.py", line 1846, in __init__
                                          self.struct.contents.invoke.argtypes = (objc_id, ) + tuple(ctype_for_type(arg_type) for arg_type i
                                      n argtypes)
                                        File "Pyto.app/Lib/rubicon/objc/api.py", line 1846, in <genexpr>
                                          self.struct.contents.invoke.argtypes = (objc_id, ) + tuple(ctype_for_type(arg_type) for arg_type i
                                      n argtypes)
                                        File "Pyto.app/Lib/rubicon/objc/types.py", line 103, in ctype_for_type
                                          return _ctype_for_type_map.get(tp, tp)
                                      TypeError: unhashable type: 'list'
                                      
                                      @Block
                                      def handler(altitudeData:ObjCInstance, err:ObjCInstance) :#-> None:
                                          print(altitudeData)
                                      
                                      handler_block = ObjCBlock(handler, None)#, [c_void_p, c_void_p])
                                      

                                      Gives

                                      Traceback (most recent call last):
                                        File "iCloud/barometer.py", line 6, in <module>
                                          def handler(altitudeData:ObjCInstance, err:ObjCInstance) :#-> None:
                                        File "Pyto.app/Lib/rubicon/objc/api.py", line 1930, in __init__
                                          raise ValueError(
                                      ValueError: Function has no return type annotation - please add one, or pass return and argument types
                                       directly into Block
                                      Traceback (most recent call last):
                                        File "iCloud/barometer.py", line 6, in <module>
                                          def handler(altitudeData:ObjCInstance, err:ObjCInstance) :#-> None:
                                        File "Pyto.app/Lib/rubicon/objc/api.py", line 1930, in __init__
                                          raise ValueError(
                                      ValueError: Function has no return type annotation - please add one, or pass return and argument types
                                       directly into Block
                                      
                                      @Block
                                      def handler(altitudeData:ObjCInstance, err:ObjCInstance) -> None:
                                          print(altitudeData)
                                          
                                      handler_block = ObjCBlock(handler, None, (c_void_p, c_void_p))
                                      

                                      Gives

                                      Traceback (most recent call last):
                                        File "iCloud/barometer.py", line 10, in <module>
                                          handler_block = ObjCBlock(handler, None, (c_void_p, c_void_p))
                                        File "Pyto.app/Lib/rubicon/objc/api.py", line 1846, in __init__
                                          self.struct.contents.invoke.argtypes = (objc_id, ) + tuple(ctype_for_type(arg_type) for arg_type i
                                      n argtypes)
                                      TypeError: item 2 in _argtypes_ has no from_param method
                                      
                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • bosco
                                        bosco last edited by bosco

                                        @mikeno This code works for me with the latest version of pyto.

                                        # coding: utf-8
                                        from rubicon.objc import Block, ObjCClass, ObjCInstance, py_from_ns
                                        from rubicon.objc.runtime import objc_id
                                        
                                        pressure = None
                                        
                                        def handler(_data) -> None:
                                            nspressure = ObjCInstance(_data).pressure
                                            global pressure
                                            pressure = py_from_ns(nspressure)
                                        
                                        handler_block = Block(handler, None, (objc_id))
                                        
                                        def get_pressure():
                                            CMAltimeter = ObjCClass('CMAltimeter')
                                            NSOperationQueue = ObjCClass('NSOperationQueue')
                                            if not CMAltimeter.isRelativeAltitudeAvailable():
                                                print('This device has no barometer.')
                                                return
                                            altimeter = CMAltimeter.new()
                                            main_q = NSOperationQueue.mainQueue
                                            altimeter.startRelativeAltitudeUpdatesToQueue_withHandler_(main_q, handler_block)
                                            print('Started altitude updates.')
                                            try:
                                                while pressure is None:
                                                    pass
                                            finally:
                                                altimeter.stopRelativeAltitudeUpdates()
                                                print('Updates stopped.')
                                                return pressure
                                        
                                        if __name__ == '__main__':
                                            result = get_pressure()
                                            print(result)
                                            del pressure
                                        cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • cvp
                                          cvp @bosco last edited by cvp

                                          @bosco Thanks for him, and for me, so I don't have to test anymore.
                                          Do you know why the handler does not have a 2nd parameter (error) like described in Apple doc?

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • JonB
                                            JonB last edited by JonB

                                            @cvp, I think this one was correct:

                                            @Block
                                            def handler(altitudeData:ObjCInstance, err:ObjCInstance) -> None:
                                               print(altitudeData)
                                            

                                            But then pass handler directly to ObjC -- don't call ObjCBlock on it. ObjCBlock makes an Objc block callable by python, which isn't needed here.

                                            Or, to make no other changes:

                                            @Block
                                            def handler_block(altitudeData:ObjCInstance, err:ObjCInstance) -> None:
                                               print(altitudeData)
                                            
                                            cvp 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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