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Home/ Questions/Q 4101940
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T20:45:42+00:00 2026-05-20T20:45:42+00:00

I’m trying to expose my C++ Classes to Python using Boost.Python. Here is a

  • 0

I’m trying to expose my C++ Classes to Python using Boost.Python. Here is a simplyfied version of what i’m trying to do:

I have a class A deriving from boost::noncopyable and a second class B with a method that takes a reference to A as an argument.

class A : boost::noncopyable { /*...*/ };

class B {

public:

    virtual void do_something(A& a) {
        /*...*/
    }
};

I’m exposing the classes as follows:

/* Wrapper for B, so B can be extended in python */
struct BWrap : public B, wrapper<B> {

    void do_something(A &a) {

        if (override do_something = this->get_override("do_something")) {
            do_something(a);
            return;
        }
        else {
            B::do_something(a);
        }
    }

    void default_do_something(A& a) { this->B::do_something(a); }
};

BOOST_PYTHON_MODULE(SomeModule) {

    class_<A, boost::noncopyable>("A");

    class_<BWrap, boost::noncopyable>("B")
        .def("do_something", &B::do_something, &BWrap::default_do_something)
    ;
}

I extend B in python like this:

test.py:

import SomeModule


class BDerived(SomeModule.B):

    def do_something(self, a):
        pass

and call the extended B like this:

try {
    py::object main = py::import("__main__"); \
    py::object global(main.attr("__dict__")); \
    py::object result = py::exec_file("test.py", global, global); \
    py::object pluginClass = global["BDerived"]; \
    py::object plugin_base = pluginClass(); \

    B& plugin = py::extract<B&>(plugin_base) BOOST_EXTRACT_WORKAROUND;

    A a;
    B.do_something(a);
}
catch (py::error_already_set) { 
    PyErr_Print();
}

However this results in an error message:

TypeError: No to_python (by-value) converter found for C++ type: A

If A isn’t derived from boost::noncopyable the code runs without any errors but the argument a in do_something(A& a) gets copied during the function call even though it’s passed in by reference. But just removing the noncopyable requirement on A isn’t an option since it’s there for a reason.

Any suggestions how to solve the problem?

Thanks.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T20:45:43+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 8:45 pm

    Change B.do_something(a); to B.do_something(boost::ref(a));.

    See Calling Python Functions and Methods in the boost manual.

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