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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?

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    • 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

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        • 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
                    
                    E 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
                          • cvp
                            cvp @mikeno last edited by

                            @mikeno With the barometer module of @bosco, where print lines are commented, this script works and continues to log the pressure even if I close the iPad cover. Not tested during a day.

                            import background as bg
                            import barometer
                            
                            with bg.BackgroundTask() as b:
                              while True:
                                result = barometer.get_pressure()
                                l= f"{b.execution_time()}:{result}\n"
                                with open("/private/var/mobile/Library/Mobile Documents/iCloud~is~workflow~my~workflows/Documents/bg.txt", mode='at') as fil:
                                  fil.write(l)
                                #print(b.execution_time(), result)
                                b.wait(5)
                            
                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • mikeno
                              mikeno last edited by

                              Hi everybody, thx for helping, I’ll buy Pyto and try.

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

                                @JonB said

                                But then pass handler directly to ObjC

                                how do I do that?

                                In the bosco solution, there is no @Block line

                                Édit: ok, understood, use the handler_block directly in

                                    altimeter.startRelativeAltitudeUpdatesToQueue_withHandler_(main_q, handler)
                                

                                Thanks for your explanations

                                Edit2: but I need

                                @Block
                                def handler(altitudeData:ObjCInstance, err:ObjCInstance) -> None:
                                   print(ObjCInstance(altitudeData).pressure)
                                
                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • bosco
                                  bosco last edited by bosco

                                  I dropped the 2nd parameter (error) because it caused an exception: "item 2 in argtypes has no from_param method", so I tried running without the error parameter.

                                  After reading the last comment by @JonB I now understand the proper use of @Block witch can be called directly.

                                  This works for me.

                                  # coding: utf-8
                                  from rubicon.objc import Block, ObjCClass, ObjCInstance, py_from_ns
                                  from rubicon.objc.runtime import objc_id
                                  
                                  pressure = None
                                  
                                  @Block
                                  def handler(altitudeData:ObjCInstance, err:ObjCInstance) -> None:
                                      nspressure = ObjCInstance(altitudeData).pressure
                                      global pressure
                                      pressure = py_from_ns(nspressure)
                                  
                                  """
                                  def bhandler(_data) -> None:
                                      nspressure = ObjCInstance(_data).pressure
                                      global pressure
                                      pressure = py_from_ns(nspressure)
                                  
                                  handler_block = Block(bhandler, 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)
                                      altimeter.startRelativeAltitudeUpdatesToQueue_withHandler_(main_q, handler)
                                      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

                                    @bosco said

                                    After reading the last comment by @JonB I now understand the proper use of @Block witch can be called directly.

                                    Yes, this is what I had also found and explained in my last post

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

                                      @cvp Correct. After my morning brain fog cleared, that is what you said in your last edit. :-)

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

                                        @bosco this, you bought Pyto and already tried...

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

                                          @cvp I bought Pyto in 2019. I am currently running Pyto 17.1.1 I have tested barometer.py on iPhone 12 mini and iPad mini 4th gen.

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

                                            @bosco I'm sincerely sorry, my "thus, you bought Pyto and already tried..." was erroneously for @mikeno. I guess that you, @bosco, you know Pyto because you have been part of the solution with @jonB.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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