mxutils.ImportSymbols¶
- 
mxutils.ImportSymbols(path: str, output: Type = None) → dict[str, float | int | str] | None¶
- Parses elements of all resource files contained in the given - pathinto the global scope of the caller or into a dictionary.- See also - Parameters
- path (str) – The path within which header files should be discovered and parsed. 
- output (typing.Type) – If the parsed symbols should be placed in the global scope or be returned as a dictionary. Pass - Noneto let them be placed in the global scope and- dictto have the function return them as a dictionary. Defaults to- None.
 
- Returns
- The parsed symbol value pairs as or nothing when the - outputwas- None
- Return type
- dict[str, float | int | str] | None 
- Example
 - The following header file - c:\data\c4d_symbols.h,- enum { ID_FOO = 1000, ID_BAR = 1001, _DUMMY_ELEMENT_ }; - can be imported as follows: - import os import mxutils # Recursively parse header files in "c:\data" into this scope. mxutils.ImportSymbols("c:\data") # This would also work when only a singular file should be parsed. mxutils.ImportSymbols("c:\data\c4d_symbols.h") # The parsed symbols are now exposed in the global scope. print(ID_FOO) # Will print 1000 print(ID_BAR) # Will print 1001 # Alternatively, symbols can also be parsed into a dictionary. data: dict[str, int] = mxutils.ImportSymbols("c:\data\c4d_symbols.h", output=dict) print(data["ID_FOO"]) # Will print 1000 print(data["ID_BAR"]) # Will print 1001