Dear all,

I've successfully embedded the Python interpreter into a set of C/C++ application programs that use a larger library project with information from http://docs.python.org/api/api.html and http://docs.python.org/ext/ext.html. Now I want to wrap classes and functions from the associated libraries so that I can write new applications completely in Python, but I'm not entirely sure how to start because I have some problems understanding which is the best way. It would be nice if someone could answer the following questions and clarify this matter:

- until now I've used the approach as documented in http://docs.python.org/ext/extending-with-embedding.html to extend the embedded interpreter and that works pretty well. I'd like to use a similar approach for other C applications. Can I write a C library that implements this technique and link it into all C applications that need Python support, or is there a better, more elegant way?

- in the documentation, there's an example that illustrates the creation of a python module for pure extending of a python script (the Noddy stuff). Do I have to make a separate module for each library I want to wrap? If yes, how can I manage the case where two libraries can access each other?

- if I write an extension module, how can I handle the case where the C wrapper methods want to call back into the same Python interpreter instance?

- I think my questions break down into a reference to documentation where a similar problem is explained in detail. Does anyone have such information?

Thanks!
Thomas.
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