|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Previously, two versions of the `qtwidget` functions existed,
`qwidget()` and `pyqwidget()`, with the only difference being that
`qwidget()` returned a pointer to the `QWidget` object managed by the
corresponding block, while `pyqwidget()` returned that same pointer, but as
an integer (Or `PyLong` in this case).
While `qwidget()` is used by C++ code accessing the widgets,
`pyqwidget()` is only used for the python interface. This makes these
two methods redundant, thus this commit entirely removes `pyqwidget()`,
and modifies the `qwidget()` python wrapper to behave like
`pyqwidget()`. Note that we can be fairly confident that this change
will not effect potential users of `qwidget()`, because any invocation
on the objects previously returned by `qwidget()` would cause a
segmentation fault.
This commit also fixes a memory leak:
Internally, the `pyqwidget()` functions were returning a PyLong `PyObject *`,
which was then upwrapped in a pybind trampoline without decrementing
the reference count of that python object.
Signed-off-by: David Winter <david.winter@analog.com>
|