I have been given a library written in C# that I'm trying to call using Python for .NET.
The primary class I need an instance of has a constructor like:
GDhuClient(IGDhuSettings)
There are no (exposed) classes that implement the IGDhuSettings interface. When I create a Python class to implement it, e.g.,
class PyGDhuSettings(IGDhuSettings):
    ...
I get TypeError: interface takes exactly one argument if I don't have a __new__ method or if I define one the normal way:
def __new__(cls):
    return super().__new__(cls)
If I try to instantiate the interface as if it were a class, I either get the same error (with no or >1 arguments) or <whatever> does not implement IGDhuSettings if I pass it a single argument.
Looking at the Python for .NET source,
using System;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
namespace Python.Runtime
{
    /// <summary>
    /// Provides the implementation for reflected interface types. Managed
    /// interfaces are represented in Python by actual Python type objects.
    /// Each of those type objects is associated with an instance of this
    /// class, which provides the implementation for the Python type.
    /// </summary>
    internal class InterfaceObject : ClassBase
    {
        internal ConstructorInfo ctor;
        internal InterfaceObject(Type tp) : base(tp)
        {
            var coclass = (CoClassAttribute)Attribute.GetCustomAttribute(tp, cc_attr);
            if (coclass != null)
            {
                ctor = coclass.CoClass.GetConstructor(Type.EmptyTypes);
            }
        }
        private static Type cc_attr;
        static InterfaceObject()
        {
            cc_attr = typeof(CoClassAttribute);
        }
        /// <summary>
        /// Implements __new__ for reflected interface types.
        /// </summary>
        public static IntPtr tp_new(IntPtr tp, IntPtr args, IntPtr kw)
        {
            var self = (InterfaceObject)GetManagedObject(tp);
            int nargs = Runtime.PyTuple_Size(args);
            Type type = self.type;
            object obj;
            if (nargs == 1)
            {
                IntPtr inst = Runtime.PyTuple_GetItem(args, 0);
                var co = GetManagedObject(inst) as CLRObject;
                if (co == null || !type.IsInstanceOfType(co.inst))
                {
                    Exceptions.SetError(Exceptions.TypeError, $"object does not implement {type.Name}");
                    return IntPtr.Zero;
                }
                obj = co.inst;
            }
            else if (nargs == 0 && self.ctor != null)
            {
                obj = self.ctor.Invoke(null);
                if (obj == null || !type.IsInstanceOfType(obj))
                {
                    Exceptions.SetError(Exceptions.TypeError, "CoClass default constructor failed");
                    return IntPtr.Zero;
                }
            }
            else
            {
                Exceptions.SetError(Exceptions.TypeError, "interface takes exactly one argument");
                return IntPtr.Zero;
            }
            return CLRObject.GetInstHandle(obj, self.pyHandle);
        }
    }
}
I don't see a means of implementing a C# interface in Python without either a CoClass (there isn't one defined) or already having a class that implements it.
Is there some nuance that I'm missing here, or is this a limitation of Python for .NET?
Discussion on GitHub: https://github.com/pythonnet/pythonnet/issues/674