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Home/ Questions/Q 518207
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T07:54:48+00:00 2026-05-13T07:54:48+00:00

If I have something like the following class class Foo { private: int _bar;

  • 0

If I have something like the following class

class Foo
{
private:
    int _bar;
public:
    Foo& operator=( const Foo& other )
    {
        _bar = other._bar;
        return *this;
    }
}

Is there an easy way to export that functionality to python using boost::python? The documentation does not list and nice and easy

.def( self = self )

I am not an expert with python so I do not even know if this is necessary to be honest. But I want this functionality in my python scripts, so I am posting the question just to make sure.

Edit:

here are the compiler errors when I do do .def( self = self )

.\src\Python.cpp(12) : error C2780: 'boost::python::class_<W> &boost::python::class_<W>::def(const char *,Fn,const A1 &,const A2 &,const A3 &)' : expects 5 arguments - 1 provided
        with
        [
            W=Foo
        ]
        depends\common\include\boost/python/class.hpp(265) : see declaration of 'boost::python::class_<W>::def'
        with
        [
            W=Foo
        ]
.\src\Python.cpp(12) : error C2780: 'boost::python::class_<W> &boost::python::class_<W>::def(const char *,Fn,const A1 &,const A2 &)' : expects 4 arguments - 1 provided
        with
        [
            W=Foo
        ]
        depends\common\include\boost/python/class.hpp(249) : see declaration of 'boost::python::class_<W>::def'
        with
        [
            W=Foo
        ]
.\src\Python.cpp(12) : error C2780: 'boost::python::class_<W> &boost::python::class_<W>::def(const char *,A1,const A2 &)' : expects 3 arguments - 1 provided
        with
        [
            W=Foo
        ]
        depends\common\include\boost/python/class.hpp(242) : see declaration of 'boost::python::class_<W>::def'
        with
        [
            W=Foo
        ]
.\src\Python.cpp(12) : error C2780: 'boost::python::class_<W> &boost::python::class_<W>::def(const char *,F)' : expects 2 arguments - 1 provided
        with
        [
            W=Foo
        ]
        depends\common\include\boost/python/class.hpp(233) : see declaration of 'boost::python::class_<W>::def'
        with
        [
            W=Foo
        ]
.\src\Python.cpp(12) : error C2784: 'boost::python::class_<W> &boost::python::class_<W>::def(const boost::python::def_visitor<Derived> &)' : could not deduce template argument for 'const boost::python::def_visitor<Derived> &' from 'boost::python::self_ns::self_t'
        with
        [
            W=Foo
        ]
        depends\common\include\boost/python/class.hpp(223) : see declaration of 'boost::python::class_<W>::def'
        with
        [
            W=Foo
        ]
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T07:54:49+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 7:54 am

    I’m not an expert with Python, but in python the affectation with operator “=” has not the same meaning as in C++: a=b creates a new reference to the same internal object, so there is no point in exporting c++’s operator= into python interface.
    What you may do is creating a “clone” member function (implemented in terms of operator=) that will return a duplicate of the object. And import this function into Python.
    Alternatively, in Python, you can use a copy constructor: foo2 = Foo(foo1) (of course this constructor must be defined in the c++/python interface)

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