assimp/port/PyAssimp
Séverin Lemaignan 3b1464a6d9 [pyassimp] OpenGL Viewer: improved camera behaviour, simple keyboard control
While here, lots of cleaning + short docs
2012-10-23 14:56:01 +02:00
..
gen [pyassimp] Update, fix and beautify structs.py 2012-10-23 14:41:52 +02:00
pyassimp [pyassimp] Added a NullHandler to the logger 2012-10-23 14:55:53 +02:00
scripts [pyassimp] OpenGL Viewer: improved camera behaviour, simple keyboard control 2012-10-23 14:56:01 +02:00
README.md [pyassimp] Support Python3 2012-10-23 14:55:53 +02:00
setup.py [pyassimp] Added a setup.py 2012-10-23 14:55:53 +02:00

README.md

PyAssimp Readme

-- a simple Python wrapper for Assimp using ctypes to access the library. Requires Python >= 2.6.

Python 3 support is mostly here, but not well tested.

Note that pyassimp is not complete. Many ASSIMP features are missing. In particular, only loading of models is currently supported (no export).

USAGE

To get started with pyAssimp, examine the sample.py script in scripts/, which illustrates the basic usage. All Assimp data structures are wrapped using ctypes. All the data+length fields in Assimp's data structures (such as 'aiMesh::mNumVertices','aiMesh::mVertices') are replaced by simple python lists, so you can call len() on them to get their respective size and access members using [].

For example, to load a file named 'hello.3ds' and print the first vertex of the first mesh, you would do (proper error handling substituted by assertions ...):


from pyassimp.core import *
scene = load('hello.3ds')

assert len(scene.meshes)
mesh = scene.meshes[0]

assert len(mesh.vertices)
print(mesh.vertices[0])

# don't forget this one, or you will leak!
release(scene)

Another example to list the 'top nodes' in a scene:


from pyassimp.core import *
scene = load('hello.3ds')

for c in scene.rootnode.children:
    print(str(c))

release(scene)

INSTALL

Install pyassimp by running:

python setup.py install

PyAssimp requires a assimp dynamic library (DLL on windows, so on linux :-) in order to work. The default search directories are:

  • the current directory
  • on linux additionally: /usr/lib and /usr/local/lib

To build that library, refer to the Assimp master INSTALL instructions. To look in more places, edit ./pyassimp/helper.py. There's an 'additional_dirs' list waiting for your entries.