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Home/ Questions/Q 7619609
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 31, 20262026-05-31T03:43:49+00:00 2026-05-31T03:43:49+00:00

I have a function in C++ that returns a vector<vector<double> > object. I have

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I have a function in C++ that returns a vector<vector<double> > object. I have wrapped it for Python using Swig. When I call it, I am unable to subsequently modify the function’s output using the resize() or push_back() vector methods.

When I try this, I get an error that the ‘tuple’ object has no attribute ‘resize’ or ‘push_back’. Does Swig transform vectors into Tuple objects when I interact with them in Python? If that’s the case, then I assume the output from this function in Python is immutable, which is a problem. I can pass this object into wrapped methods that accept a vector of vectors of doubles. I just can’t mess with it using the vector methods from within Python. Any explanation on why this is or ideas on work-arounds would be appreciated.

Here is my swig file for reference. STL template lines are towards the end:

/* SolutionCombiner.i */
%module SolutionCombiner
%{
    /* Put header files here or function declarations like below */
    #include "Coord.hpp"
    #include "MaterialData.hpp"
    #include "FailureCriterion.hpp"
    #include "QuadPointData.hpp"
    #include "ModelSolution.hpp"
    #include "ExclusionZone.hpp"
    #include "CriticalLocation.hpp"
    #include "FailureMode.hpp"
    #include "ExecutiveFunctions.hpp"

    #include <fstream>
    #include <iostream> 
%}
%{
    #define SWIG_FILE_WITH_INIT
    std::ostream& new_ofstream(const char* FileName){
        return *(new std::ofstream(FileName));
    }

    std::istream& new_ifstream(const char* FileName){
        return *(new std::ifstream(FileName));
    }

    void write(std::ostream* FOUT, char* OutString){
        *FOUT << OutString;
    }

    std::ostream *get_cout(){return &std::cout;}
%}

%include "std_vector.i"
%include "std_string.i"
%include "std_set.i"
%include "../../source/Coord.hpp"
%include "../../source/MaterialData.hpp"
%include "../../source/FailureCriterion.hpp"
%include "../../source/QuadPointData.hpp"
%include "../../source/ModelSolution.hpp"
%include "../../source/ExclusionZone.hpp"
%include "../../source/CriticalLocation.hpp"
%include "../../source/FailureMode.hpp"
%include "../../source/ExecutiveFunctions.hpp"

namespace std {
   %template(IntVector) vector<int>;
   %template(DoubleVector) vector<double>;
   %template(DoubleVVector) vector<vector<double> >;
   %template(DoubleVVVector) vector<vector<vector<double> > >;
   %template(SolutionVector) vector<ModelSolution>;
   %template(CritLocVector) vector<CriticalLocation>;
   %template(CritLocVVector) vector<vector<CriticalLocation> >;
   %template(ModeVector) vector<FailureMode>;
   %template(IntSet) set<int>;
}
std::ofstream& new_ofstream(char* FileName);
std::ifstream& new_ifstream(char* FileName);
std::iostream *get_cout();
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-31T03:43:50+00:00Added an answer on May 31, 2026 at 3:43 am

    Yes, the vector template returns an immutable Python tuple. Maybe you could modify the std_vector.i implementation to return lists, but there is probably a good reason for the choice. You could convert them to lists so you can manipulate them in Python:

    >>> x.func()
    ((1.5, 2.5, 3.5), (1.5, 2.5, 3.5), (1.5, 2.5, 3.5), (1.5, 2.5, 3.5))
    >>> [list(n) for n in x.func()]
    [[1.5, 2.5, 3.5], [1.5, 2.5, 3.5], [1.5, 2.5, 3.5], [1.5, 2.5, 3.5]]  
    

    Note: I made a sample function that returned vector<vector<double>> as a test.

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