On Sun, May 28, 2017 at 8:27 AM, Ivan Levkivskyi <levkivskyi@gmail.com> wrote:
On 28 May 2017 at 16:13, Kevin Conway <kevinjacobconway@gmail.com> wrote:
Some of the possible options for the title are
It seems like you're talking about something most other languages would refer to as "Interfaces". What is unique about this proposal that would call for not using the industry standard language?

Well, I would say there is no "industry standard language" about structural subtyping. There are interfaces, protocols,
traits, mixins, typeclasses, roles, and probably some other terms I am not aware of - all with subtly different semantics
in different languages. There are several reasons why we use term protocol and not interface.
Two important reasons for me are:
* The term protocol is already de-facto standard in Python for things like sequence protocol, iterator protocol,
  descriptor protocol, etc.
* Protocols are very different from Java interfaces in one important aspect: they don't require explicit
  declaration of implementation, they are mainly oriented on duck-typing.
Maybe we need to add a short section to rejected ideas?

If you feel like it.

Regarding the title, I'd like to keep the word Protocol in the title too, so I'd go with "Protocols: Structural subtyping (duck typing)" -- hope that's not too long to fit in a PEP title field.
 
Type-hints should not have runtime semantics, beyond those that they have as classes
 lots of code uses isinstance(obj, collections.abc.Iterable) and similar checks with other ABCs
Having interfaces defined as something extended from abc doesn't necessitate their use at runtime, but it does open up a great deal of options for those of us who want to do so. I've been leveraging abc for a few years now to implement a lightweight version of what this PEP is attempting to achieve

IIUC this is not the main goal of the PEP, the main goal is to provide support/standard for _static_ structural subtyping.
Possibility to use protocols in runtime context is rather a minor bonus that exists mostly to provide a seamless transition
for projects that already use ABCs.

Is something like this already in the PEP? It deserves attention in one of the earlier sections.

--
--Guido van Rossum (python.org/~guido)