.. highlightlang:: c .. _memoryview-objects: .. index:: object: memoryview MemoryView objects ------------------ A :class:`memoryview` object exposes the C level :ref:`buffer interface ` as a Python object which can then be passed around like any other object. .. c:function:: PyObject *PyMemoryView_FromObject(PyObject *obj) Create a memoryview object from an object that provides the buffer interface. If *obj* supports writable buffer exports, the memoryview object will be readable and writable, other it will be read-only. .. c:function:: PyObject *PyMemoryView_FromBuffer(Py_buffer *view) Create a memoryview object wrapping the given buffer structure *view*. The memoryview object then owns the buffer represented by *view*, which means you shouldn't try to call :c:func:`PyBuffer_Release` yourself: it will be done on deallocation of the memoryview object. .. c:function:: PyObject *PyMemoryView_GetContiguous(PyObject *obj, int buffertype, char order) Create a memoryview object to a contiguous chunk of memory (in either 'C' or 'F'ortran *order*) from an object that defines the buffer interface. If memory is contiguous, the memoryview object points to the original memory. Otherwise copy is made and the memoryview points to a new bytes object. .. c:function:: int PyMemoryView_Check(PyObject *obj) Return true if the object *obj* is a memoryview object. It is not currently allowed to create subclasses of :class:`memoryview`. .. c:function:: Py_buffer *PyMemoryView_GET_BUFFER(PyObject *obj) Return a pointer to the buffer structure wrapped by the given memoryview object. The object **must** be a memoryview instance; this macro doesn't check its type, you must do it yourself or you will risk crashes.