[Python-Dev] Is static typing still optional?
Eric V. Smith
eric at trueblade.com
Tue Dec 26 21:20:45 EST 2017
On 12/21/2017 6:36 AM, Ivan Levkivskyi wrote:
> On 21 December 2017 at 11:22, Terry Reedy <tjreedy at udel.edu
> <mailto:tjreedy at udel.edu>> wrote:
>
> On 12/21/2017 4:22 AM, Eric V. Smith wrote:
>
> On 12/21/2017 1:46 AM, Chris Barker wrote:
>
>
> I suggest that it be clear in the docs, and ideally in the
> PEP, that the dataclass decorator is using the *annotation"
> syntax, and that the the only relevant part it uses is that
> an annotation exists, but the value of the annotation is
> essentially (completely?) ignored.
>
>
> I think the PEP is very clear about this: "The dataclass
> decorator examines the class to find fields. A field is defined
> as any variable identified in __annotations__. That is, a
> variable that has a type annotation. With two exceptions
> described below, none of the Data Class machinery examines the
> type specified in the annotation."
>
>
> This seems clear enough. It could come after describing what a
> dataclass *is*.
>
> I agree the docs should also be clear about this.
>
>
>
> So we should have examples like:
>
> @dataclass
> class C:
> a: ... # field with no default
> b: ... = 0 # filed with a default value
>
> Then maybe:
>
> @dataclass
> class C:
> a: "the a parameter" # field with no default
> b: "another, different parameter" = 0.0 # field with a
> default
>
> Then the docs can go to say that if the user wants to
> specify a type for use with a static type checking
> pre-processor, they can do it like so:
>
> @dataclass
> class C:
> a: int # integer field with no default
> b: float = 0.0 # float field with a default
>
> And the types will be recognized by type checkers such as mypy.
>
> And I think the non-typed examples should go first in the docs.
>
>
> Module some bike-shedding, the above seems pretty good to me.
>
>
> For me, the three options for "don't care" have a bit different meaning:
>
> * typing.Any: this class is supposed to be used with static type
> checkers, but this field is too dynamic
> * ... (ellipsis): this class may or may not be used with static type
> checkers, use the inferred type in the latter case
> * "field docstring": this class should not be used with static type checkers
>
> Assuming this, the second option would be the "real" "don't care". If
> this makes sense,
> then we can go the way proposed in
> https://github.com/python/typing/issues/276 and make ellipsis semantics
> "official" in PEP 484.
> (pending Guido's approval)
In
https://github.com/ericvsmith/dataclasses/issues/2#issuecomment-353918024,
Guido has suggested using `object`, which has the benefit of not needing
an import. And to me, it communicates the "don't care" aspect well
enough. I do understand the difference if you're using a type checker
(see for example
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39817081/typing-any-vs-object), but
if you care about that, use typing.Any.
Eric.
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