Josh Rosenberg added the comment:
If this is going to be closed as rejected, I think it still needs some improvement to the documentation. Right now, the docs for abstractproperty (deprecated in favor of combining property and abstractmethod) state:
"If only some components are abstract, only those components need to be updated to create a concrete property in a subclass:"
This heavily implies that if *all* components of the property are abstract, they must *all* be updated to create a concrete property on the subclass, when that is not the case (it's documenting a special way of overriding just one component by borrowing the base class, not a normal means of defining a property). If nothing else, mentioning this quirk in the docs seems like it would save confusion (e.g. https://stackoverflow.com/questions/65224767/python-abstract-property-cant-i... ).
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assignee: -> docs@python
components: +Documentation
nosy: +docs@python, josh.r
resolution: rejected ->
status: closed -> open
title: Abstract property setter/deleter implementation not enforced. -> Abstract property setter/deleter implementation not enforced, but documented as such
versions: +Python 3.10, Python 3.8, Python 3.9
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Python tracker
https://bugs.python.org/issue39707
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