This package provides the ability to directly call and fully interoperate with Python from the Julia language. You can import arbitrary Python modules from Julia, call Python functions (with automatic conversion of types between Julia and Python), define Python classes from Julia methods, and share large data structures between Julia and Python without copying them.
Within Julia, just use the package manager to run Pkg.add("PyCall")
to
install the files. Julia 0.5 or later is required.
The latest development version of PyCall is available from
https://github.com/stevengj/PyCall.jl. If you want to switch to
this after installing the package, run Pkg.checkout("PyCall"); Pkg.build("PyCall")
.
By default on Mac and Windows systems, Pkg.add("PyCall")
or Pkg.build("PyCall")
will use the
Conda.jl package to install a
minimal Python distribution (via
Miniconda) that is
private to Julia (not in your PATH
). You can use the Conda
Julia
package to install more Python packages, and import Conda
to print
the Conda.PYTHONDIR
directory where python
was installed.
On GNU/Linux systems, PyCall will default to using
the python
program (if any) in your PATH.
The advantage of a Conda-based configuration is particularly
compelling if you are installing PyCall in order to use packages like
PyPlot.jl or
SymPy.jl, as these can then
automatically install their Python dependencies. (To exploit this in
your own packages, use the pyimport_conda
function described below.)
If you want to use a different version of Python than the default, you can change the Python version by setting the PYTHON
environment variable to the path of the python
executable and then re-running Pkg.build("PyCall")
. In Julia:
ENV["PYTHON"] = "... path of the python program you want ..."
Pkg.build("PyCall")
Note also that you will need to re-run Pkg.build("PyCall")
if your
python
program changes significantly (e.g. you switch to a new
Python distro, or you switch from Python 2 to Python 3).
To force Julia to use its own Python distribution, via Conda, simply set ENV["PYTHON"]
to the empty string ""
and re-run Pkg.build("PyCall")
.
The current Python version being used is stored in the pyversion
global variable of the PyCall
module. You can also look at
PyCall.libpython
to find the name of the Python library or
PyCall.pyprogramname
for the python
program name. If it is
using the Conda Python, PyCall.conda
will be true
.
(Technically, PyCall does not use the python
program per se: it links
directly to the libpython
library. But it finds the location of libpython
by running python
during Pkg.build
.)
Subsequent builds of PyCall (e.g. when you update the package via
Pkg.update
) will use the same Python executable name by default,
unless you set the PYTHON
environment variable or delete the file
Pkg.dir("PyCall","deps","PYTHON")
.
Note: If you use Python
virtualenvs,
then be aware that PyCall uses the virtualenv it was built with, even
if you switch virtualenvs. If you want to switch PyCall to use a
different virtualenv, then you should switch virtualenvs and run
rm(Pkg.dir("PyCall","deps","PYTHON")); Pkg.build("PyCall")
.
Note: Usually, the necessary libraries are
installed along with Python, but pyenv on
MacOS requires you
to install it with env PYTHON_CONFIGURE_OPTS="--enable-framework" pyenv install 3.4.3
. The Enthought Canopy Python distribution is
currently not supported.
As a general rule, we tend to recommend the Anaconda Python
distribution on MacOS and
Windows, or using the Julia Conda package, in order to minimize headaches.
Here is a simple example to call Python's math.sin
function and
compare it to the built-in Julia sin
:
using PyCall
@pyimport math
math.sin(math.pi / 4) - sin(pi / 4) # returns 0.0
Type conversions are automatically performed for numeric, boolean, string, IO stream, date/period, and function types, along with tuples, arrays/lists, and dictionaries of these types. (Python functions can be converted/passed to Julia functions and vice versa!) Other types are supported via the generic PyObject type, below.
Python submodules must be imported by a separate @pyimport
call, and
in this case you must supply an identifier to to use in Julia. For example
@pyimport numpy.random as nr
nr.rand(3,4)
Multidimensional arrays exploit the NumPy array interface for
conversions between Python and Julia. By default, they are passed
from Julia to Python without making a copy, but from Python to Julia a
copy is made; no-copy conversion of Python to Julia arrays can be achieved
with the PyArray
type below.
Keyword arguments can also be passed. For example, matplotlib's pyplot uses keyword arguments to specify plot options, and this functionality is accessed from Julia by:
@pyimport matplotlib.pyplot as plt
x = linspace(0,2*pi,1000); y = sin(3*x + 4*cos(2*x));
plt.plot(x, y, color="red", linewidth=2.0, linestyle="--")
plt.show()
However, for better integration with Julia graphics backends and to
avoid the need for the show
function, we recommend using matplotlib
via the Julia PyPlot module.
Arbitrary Julia functions can be passed to Python routines taking function arguments. For example, to find the root of cos(x) - x, we could call the Newton solver in scipy.optimize via:
@pyimport scipy.optimize as so
so.newton(x -> cos(x) - x, 1)
A macro exists for mimicking Python's "with statement". For example:
@pywith pybuiltin("open")("file.txt","w") as f begin
f[:write]("hello")
end
The type of f
can be specified with f::T
(for example, to override automatic
conversion, use f::PyObject
). Similarly, if the context manager returns a type
which is automatically converted to a Julia type, you will have override this
via @pywith EXPR::PyObject ...
.
Important: The biggest difference from Python is that object attributes/members are
accessed with o[:attribute]
rather than o.attribute
, so that o.method(...)
in
Python is replaced by o[:method](...)
in Julia. Also, you use
get(o, key)
rather than o[key]
. (However, you can access integer
indices via o[i]
as in Python, albeit with 1-based Julian indices rather
than 0-based Python indices.) (This is because Julia does not
permit overloading the .
operator yet.) See also the section on
PyObject
below, as well as the pywrap
function to create anonymous
modules that simulate .
access (this is what @pyimport
does). For
example, using Biopython we can do:
@pyimport Bio.Seq as s
@pyimport Bio.Alphabet as a
my_dna = s.Seq("AGTACACTGGT", a.generic_dna)
my_dna[:find]("ACT")
whereas in Python the last step would have been my_dna.find("ACT")
.
Here are solutions to some common problems:
-
As mentioned above, use
foo[:bar]
andfoo[:bar](...)
rather thanfoo.bar
andfoo.bar(...)
, respectively, to access attributes and methods of Python objects. -
By default, PyCall doesn't include the current directory in the Python search path. If you want to do that (in order to load a Python module from the current directory), just run
pushfirst!(PyVector(pyimport("sys")["path"]), "")
.
The @pyimport
macro is built on top of several routines for
manipulating Python objects in Julia, via a type PyObject
described
below. These can be used to have greater control over the types and
data passed between Julia and Python, as well as to access additional
Python functionality (especially in conjunction with the low-level interfaces
described later).
The PyCall module also provides a new type PyObject
(a wrapper around
PyObject*
in Python's C API) representing a reference to a Python object.
Constructors PyObject(o)
are provided for a number of Julia types,
and PyCall also supplies convert(T, o::PyObject)
to convert
PyObjects back into Julia types T
. Currently, the types supported
are numbers (integer, real, and complex), booleans, strings, IO streams,
dates/periods, and functions, along with tuples and arrays/lists
thereof, but more are planned. (Julia symbols are converted to Python
strings.)
Given o::PyObject
, o[:attribute]
is equivalent to o.attribute
in Python, with automatic type conversion. To get an attribute as a
PyObject
without type conversion, do o["attribute"]
instead.
The keys(o::PyObject)
function returns an array of the available
attribute symbols.
Given o::PyObject
, get(o, key)
is equivalent to o[key]
in
Python, with automatic type conversion. To get as a PyObject
without type conversion, do get(o, PyObject, key)
, or more generally
get(o, SomeType, key)
. You can also supply a default value to use
if the key is not found by get(o, key, default)
or get(o, SomeType, key, default)
. Similarly, set!(o, key, val)
is equivalent to
o[key] = val
in Python, and delete!(o, key)
is equivalent to del o[key]
in Python. For one or more integer indices, o[i]
in Julia
is equivalent to o[i-1]
in Python.
You can call an o::PyObject
via o(args...)
just like in Python
(assuming that the object is callable in Python). The explicit
pycall
form is still useful in Julia if you want to specify the
return type.
pystr(o)
and pyrepr(o)
are analogous to str
and repr
in Python, respectively.
Assuming you have NumPy installed (true by default if you use Conda),
then a Julia a::Array
of NumPy-compatible elements is converted
by PyObject(a)
into a NumPy wrapper for the same data, i.e. without
copying the data. Julia arrays are stored in column-major order,
and since NumPy supports column-major arrays this is not a problem.
However, the default ordering of NumPy arrays created in Python is row-major, and some Python packages will throw an error if you try to pass them column-major NumPy arrays. To deal with this, you can use PyReverseDims(a)
to pass a Julia array as a row-major NumPy array with the dimensions reversed. For example, if a
is a 3x4x5 Julia array, then PyReverseDims(a)
passes it as a 5x4x3 NumPy row-major array (without making a copy of the underlying data).
A Vector{UInt8}
object in Julia, by default, is converted to a Python
bytearray
object. If you want a bytes
object instead, you can use
the function pybytes(a)
.
Multidimensional NumPy arrays (ndarray
) are supported and can be
converted to the native Julia Array
type, which makes a copy of the data.
Alternatively, the PyCall module also provides a new type PyArray
(a
subclass of AbstractArray
) which implements a no-copy wrapper around
a NumPy array (currently of numeric types or objects only). Just use
PyArray
as the return type of a pycall
returning an ndarray
, or
call PyArray(o::PyObject)
on an ndarray
object o
. (Technically,
a PyArray
works for any Python object that uses the NumPy array
interface to provide a data pointer and shape information.)
Conversely, when passing arrays to Python, Julia Array
types are
converted to PyObject
types without making a copy via NumPy,
e.g. when passed as pycall
arguments.
The PyCall module provides a new type PyVector
(a subclass of
AbstractVector
) which implements a no-copy wrapper around an
arbitrary Python list or sequence object. (Unlike PyArray
, the
PyVector
type is not limited to NumPy
arrays, although using
PyArray
for the latter is generally more efficient.) Just use
PyArray
as the return type of a pycall
returning a list or
sequence object (including tuples), or call PyVector(o::PyObject)
on
a sequence object o
.
A v::PyVector
supports the usual v[index]
referencing and assignment,
along with delete!
and pop!
operations. copy(v)
converts v
to
an ordinary Julia Vector
.
Similar to PyVector
, PyCall also provides a type PyDict
(a subclass
of Association
) that implements a no-copy wrapper around a Python
dictionary (or any object implementing the mapping protocol). Just
use PyDict
as the return type of a pycall
returning a dictionary,
or call PyDict(o::PyObject)
on a dictionary object o
. By
default, a PyDict
is an Any => Any
dictionary (or actually PyAny => PyAny
) that performs runtime type inference, but if your Python
dictionary has known, fixed types you can insteady use PyDict{K,V}
given
the key and value types K
and V
respectively.
Currently, passing Julia dictionaries to Python makes a copy of the Julia dictionary.
Julia IO
streams are converted into Python objects implementing the
RawIOBase
interface, so they can be used for binary I/O in Python. However,
some Python code (notably unpickling) expects a stream implementing
the
TextIOBase
interface, which differs from RawIOBase mainly in that read
an
readall
functions return strings rather than byte arrays. If you
need to pass an IO
stream as a text-IO object, just call
PyTextIO(io::IO)
to convert it.
(There doesn't seem to be any good way to determine automatically whether Python wants a stream argument to return strings or binary data. Also, unlike Python, Julia does not open files separately in "text" or "binary" modes, so we cannot determine the conversion simply from how the file was opened.)
The PyAny
type is used in conversions to tell PyCall to detect the
Python type at runtime and convert to the corresponding native Julia
type. That is, pycall(func, PyAny, ...)
and convert(PyAny, o::PyObject)
both automatically convert their result to a native
Julia type (if possible). This is convenient, but will lead
to slightly worse performance (due to the overhead of runtime type-checking
and the fact that the Julia JIT compiler can no longer infer the type).
In most cases, the @pyimport
macro automatically makes the
appropriate type conversions to Julia types based on runtime
inspection of the Python objects. However greater control over these
type conversions (e.g. to use a no-copy PyArray
for a Python
multidimensional array rather than copying to an Array
) can be
achieved by using the lower-level functions below. Using pycall
in
cases where the Python return type is known can also improve
performance, both by eliminating the overhead of runtime type inference
and also by providing more type information to the Julia compiler.
-
pycall(function::PyObject, returntype::Type, args...)
. Call the given Pythonfunction
(typically looked up from a module) with the givenargs...
(of standard Julia types which are converted automatically to the corresponding Python types if possible), converting the return value toreturntype
(use areturntype
ofPyObject
to return the unconverted Python object reference, or ofPyAny
to request an automated conversion). For convenience, a macro@pycall
exists which automatically converts@pycall function(args...)::returntype
intopycall(function,returntype,args...)
. -
pyimport(s)
: Import the Python modules
(a string or symbol) and return a pointer to it (aPyObject
). Functions or other symbols in the module may then be looked up bys[name]
wherename
is a string (for the rawPyObject
) or symbol (for automatic type-conversion). Unlike the@pyimport
macro, this does not define a Julia module and members cannot be accessed withs.name
. -
py"..."
evaluates"..."
as a Python string, equivalent to Python'seval
function, and returns the result converted toPyAny
. Alternatively,py"..."o
returns the rawPyObject
(which can then be manually converted if desired). You can interpolate Julia variables and other expressions into the Python code with$
, which interpolates the value (converted toPyObject
) of the given expression---data is not passed as a string, so this is different from ordinary Julia string interpolation. e.g.py"sum($([1,2,3]))"
calls the Pythonsum
function on the Julia array[1,2,3]
, returning6
. In contrast, if you use$$
before the interpolated expression, then the value of the expression is inserted as a string into the Python code, allowing you to generate Python code itself via Julia expressions. For example, ifx="1+1"
in Julia, thenpy"$x"
returns the string"1+1"
, butpy"$$x"
returns2
. If you usepy"""..."""
to pass a multi-line string, the string can contain arbitrary Python code (not just a single expression) to be evaluated, but the return value isnothing
; this is useful e.g. to define pure-Python functions, and is equivalent to Python'sexec
statement. (If you define a Python globalg
in a multilinepy"""..."""
string, you can retrieve it in Julia by subsequently evaluatingpy"g"
.) -
pybuiltin(s)
: Look ups
(a string or symbol) among the global Python builtins. Ifs
is a string it returns aPyObject
, while ifs
is a symbol it returns the builtin converted toPyAny
. (You can also usepy"s"
to look up builtins or other Python globas.) -
pywrap(o::PyObject)
returns a wrapperw
that is an anonymous module which provides (read) access to converted versions ofo
's members asw.member
. (For example,@pyimport module as name
is equivalent toname = pywrap(pyimport("module"))
.) If the Python module contains identifiers that are reserved words in Julia (e.g.function
), they cannot be accessed asw.member
; one must instead usew.pymember(:member)
(for thePyAny
conversion) orw.pymember("member")
(for the rawPyObject
).pywrap
is rather inefficient since it converts every member ofo
at once; you are generally encouraged to simply access members viao[:member]
rather than usingpywrap
.
Occasionally, you may need to pass a keyword argument to Python that
is a reserved word in Julia.
For example, calling f(x, function=g)
will fail because function
is
a reserved word in Julia. In such cases, you can use the lower-level
Julia syntax f(x; :function=>g)
.
Julia functions get converted to callable Python objects, so you can easily call Julia from Python via callback function arguments. The pyjulia module allows you to call Julia directly from Python, and also uses PyCall to do its conversions.
A Julia function f(args...)
is ordinarily converted to a callable
Python object p(args...)
that first converts its Python arguments
into Julia arguments by the default PyAny
conversion, calls f
,
then converts the Julia return value of f
back into a Python object
with the default PyObject(...)
conversion. However, you can
exert lower-level control over these argument/return conversions
by calling pyfunction(f, ...)
or pyfunctionret(f, ...)
; see the
documentation ?pyfunction
and ?pyfunctionret
for more information.
@pydef
creates a Python class whose methods are implemented in Julia.
For instance,
@pyimport numpy.polynomial as P
@pydef type Doubler <: P.Polynomial
function __init__(self, x=10)
self[:x] = x
end
my_method(self, arg1::Number) = arg1 + 20
x2.get(self) = self[:x] * 2
function x2.set!(self, new_val)
self[:x] = new_val / 2
end
end
Doubler()[:x2]
is essentially equivalent to the following Python code:
import numpy.polynomial
class Doubler(numpy.polynomial.Polynomial):
def __init__(self, x=10):
self.x = x
def my_method(self, arg1): return arg1 + 20
@property
def x2(self): return self.x * 2
@x2.setter
def x2(self, new_val):
self.x = new_val / 2
Doubler().x2
The method arguments and return values are automatically converted between Julia and Python. All Python special methods are supported (__len__
, __add__
, etc.).
@pydef
allows for multiple inheritance of Python classes:
@pydef type SomeType <: (BaseClass1, BaseClass2)
...
end
Here's another example using Tkinter:
using PyCall
@pyimport Tkinter as tk
@pydef type SampleApp <: tk.Tk
__init__(self, args...; kwargs...) = begin
tk.Tk[:__init__](self, args...; kwargs...)
self[:label] = tk.Label(text="Hello, world!")
self[:label][:pack](padx=10, pady=10)
end
end
app = SampleApp()
app[:mainloop]()
For Python packages that have a graphical user interface (GUI), notably plotting packages like matplotlib (or MayaVi or Chaco), it is convenient to start the GUI event loop (which processes things like mouse clicks) as an asynchronous task within Julia, so that the GUI is responsive without blocking Julia's input prompt. PyCall includes functions to implement these event loops for some of the most common cross-platform GUI toolkits: wxWidgets, GTK+ version 2 (via PyGTK) or version 3 (via PyGObject), and Qt (via the PyQt4 or PySide Python modules).
You can set a GUI event loop via:
-
pygui_start(gui::Symbol=pygui())
. Here,gui
is either:wx
,:gtk
,:gtk3
,:tk
, or:qt
to start the respective toolkit's event loop. (:qt
will use PyQt4 or PySide, preferring the former; if you need to require one or the other you can instead use:qt_pyqt4
or:qt_pyside
, respectively.) It defaults to the return value ofpygui()
, which returns a current default GUI (see below). Passing agui
argument also changes the default GUI, equivalent to callingpygui(gui)
below. You may start event loops for more than one GUI toolkit (to run simultaneously). Callingpygui_start
more than once for a given toolkit does nothing (except to change the currentpygui
default). -
pygui()
: return the current default GUI toolkit (Symbol
). If the default GUI has not been set already, this is the first of:tk
,:qt
,:wx
,:gtk
, or:gtk3
for which the corresponding Python package is installed.pygui(gui::Symbol)
changes the default GUI togui
. -
pygui_stop(gui::Symbol=pygui())
: Stop any running event loop forgui
(which defaults to the current return value ofpygui
). Returnstrue
if an event loop was running, andfalse
otherwise.
To use these GUI facilities with some Python libraries, it is enough to simply start the appropriate toolkit's event-loop before importing the library. However, in other cases it is necessary to explicitly tell the library which GUI toolkit to use and that an interactive mode is desired. To make this even easier, it is convenient to have wrapper modules around popular Python libraries, such as the PyPlot module for Julia.
If you want to call low-level functions in the Python C API, you can
do so using ccall
.
-
Use
@pysym(func::Symbol)
to get a function pointer to pass toccall
given a symbolfunc
in the Python API. e.g. you can callint Py_IsInitialized()
byccall(@pysym(:Py_IsInitialized), Int32, ())
. -
PyCall defines the typealias
PyPtr
forPythonObject*
argument types, andPythonObject
(see above) arguments are correctly converted to this type.PythonObject(p::PyPtr)
creates a Julia wrapper around aPyPtr
return value. -
Use
PyObject
and theconvert
routines mentioned above to convert Julia types to/fromPyObject*
references. -
If a new reference is returned by a Python function, immediately convert the
PyPtr
return values toPythonObject
objects in order to have their Python reference counts decremented when the object is garbage collected in Julia. i.e.PythonObject(ccall(func, PyPtr, ...))
. Important: for Python routines that return a borrowed reference, you should instead dopyincref(PyObject(...))
to obtain a new reference. -
You can call
pyincref(o::PyObject)
andpydecref(o::PyObject)
to manually increment/decrement the reference count. This is sometimes needed when low-level functions steal a reference or return a borrowed one. -
The function
pyerr_check(msg::AbstractString)
can be used to check if a Python exception was thrown, and throw a Julia exception (which includes bothmsg
and the Python exception object) if so. The Python exception status may be cleared by callingpyerr_clear()
. -
The function
pytype_query(o::PyObject)
returns a native Julia type thato
can be converted into, if possible, orPyObject
if not. -
pyisinstance(o::PyObject, t::Symbol)
can be used to query whethero
is of a given Python type (wheret
is the identifier of a globalPyTypeObject
in the Python C API), e.g.pyisinstance(o, :PyDict_Type)
checks whethero
is a Python dictionary. Alternatively,pyisinstance(o::PyObject, t::PyObject)
performs the same check given a Python type objectt
.pytypeof(o::PyObject)
returns the Python type ofo
, equivalent totype(o)
in Python.
You can use PyCall from any Julia code, including within Julia modules. However, some care is required when using PyCall from precompiled Julia modules. The key thing to remember is that all Python objects (any PyObject
) contain pointers to memory allocated by the Python runtime, and such pointers cannot be saved in precompiled constants. (When a precompiled library is reloaded, these pointers will not contain valid memory addresses.)
The solution is fairly simple:
-
Python objects that you create in functions called after the module is loaded are always safe.
-
If you want to store a Python object in a global variable that is initialized automatically when the module is loaded, then initialize the variable in your module's
__init__
function. For a type-stable global constant, initialize the constant toPyNULL()
at the top level, and then use thecopy!
function in your module's__init__
function to mutate it to its actual value.
For example, suppose your module uses the scipy.optimize
module, and you want to load this module when your module is loaded and store it in a global constant scipy_opt
. You could do:
__precompile__() # this module is safe to precompile
module MyModule
using PyCall
const scipy_opt = PyNULL()
function __init__()
copy!(scipy_opt, pyimport_conda("scipy.optimize", "scipy"))
end
end
Then you can access the scipy.optimize
functions as scipy_opt[:newton]
and so on.
Here, instead of pyimport
, we have used the function pyimport_conda
. The second argument is the name of the Anaconda package that provides this module. This way, if importing scipy.optimize
fails because the user hasn't installed scipy
, it will either (a) automatically install scipy
and retry the pyimport
if PyCall is configured to use the Conda Python install (or
any other Anaconda-based Python distro for which the user has installation privileges), or (b) throw an error explaining that scipy
needs to be installed, and explain how to configure PyCall to use Conda so that it can be installed automatically. More generally, you can call pyimport(module, package, channel)
to specify an optional Anaconda "channel" for installing non-standard Anaconda packages.
(Note that you cannot use @pyimport
safely with precompilation, because that declares a global constant that internally has a pointer to the module. You can use pywrap(pyimport(...))
in your __init__
function to a assign a global variable using the .
notation like @pyimport
, however, albeit without the type stability of the global const
as above.)
This package was written by Steven G. Johnson.