2019-04-12 20:17:52 -04:00
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PEP: 591
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Title: Adding a final qualifier to typing
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Author: Michael J. Sullivan <sully@msully.net>, Ivan Levkivskyi <levkivskyi@gmail.com>
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2019-04-17 16:45:01 -04:00
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BDFL-Delegate: Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org>
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2019-04-12 20:17:52 -04:00
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Discussions-To: typing-sig@python.org
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2019-05-26 05:58:57 -04:00
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Status: Accepted
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2019-04-12 20:17:52 -04:00
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Type: Standards Track
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2022-10-06 20:36:39 -04:00
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Topic: Typing
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2019-04-12 20:17:52 -04:00
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 15-Mar-2019
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2019-05-26 05:58:57 -04:00
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Python-Version: 3.8
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Post-History:
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2019-05-26 05:58:57 -04:00
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Resolution: https://mail.python.org/archives/list/typing-sig@python.org/message/FDO4KFYWYQEP3U2HVVBEBR3SXPHQSHYR/
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2019-04-12 20:17:52 -04:00
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Abstract
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========
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This PEP proposes a "final" qualifier to be added to the ``typing``
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module---in the form of a ``final`` decorator and a ``Final`` type
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annotation---to serve three related purposes:
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* Declaring that a method should not be overridden
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* Declaring that a class should not be subclassed
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* Declaring that a variable or attribute should not be reassigned
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Motivation
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==========
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The ``final`` decorator
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-----------------------
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The current ``typing`` module lacks a way to restrict the use of
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inheritance or overriding at a typechecker level. This is a common
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feature in other object-oriented languages (such as Java), and is
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useful for reducing the potential space of behaviors of a class,
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easing reasoning.
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Some situations where a final class or method may be useful include:
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* A class wasn’t designed to be subclassed or a method wasn't designed
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to be overridden. Perhaps it would not work as expected, or be
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error-prone.
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* Subclassing or overriding would make code harder to understand or
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maintain. For example, you may want to prevent unnecessarily tight
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coupling between base classes and subclasses.
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* You want to retain the freedom to arbitrarily change the class
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implementation in the future, and these changes might break
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subclasses.
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The ``Final`` annotation
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------------------------
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The current ``typing`` module lacks a way to indicate that a variable
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will not be assigned to. This is a useful feature in several
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situations:
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* Preventing unintended modification of module and class level
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constants and documenting them as constants in a checkable way.
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* Creating a read-only attribute that may not be overridden by
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subclasses. (``@property`` can make an attribute read-only but
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does not prevent overriding)
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* Allowing a name to be used in situations where ordinarily a literal
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is expected (for example as a field name for ``NamedTuple``, a tuple
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of types passed to ``isinstance``, or an argument to a function
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with arguments of ``Literal`` type (:pep:`586`)).
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Specification
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=============
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The ``final`` decorator
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-----------------------
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The ``typing.final`` decorator is used to restrict the use of
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inheritance and overriding.
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A type checker should prohibit any class decorated with ``@final``
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from being subclassed and any method decorated with ``@final`` from
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being overridden in a subclass. The method decorator version may be
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used with all of instance methods, class methods, static methods, and properties.
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For example::
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from typing import final
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@final
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class Base:
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...
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class Derived(Base): # Error: Cannot inherit from final class "Base"
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...
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and::
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from typing import final
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class Base:
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@final
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def foo(self) -> None:
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...
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class Derived(Base):
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def foo(self) -> None: # Error: Cannot override final attribute "foo"
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# (previously declared in base class "Base")
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...
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For overloaded methods, ``@final`` should be placed on the
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implementation (or on the first overload, for stubs)::
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from typing import Any, overload
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class Base:
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@overload
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def method(self) -> None: ...
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@overload
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def method(self, arg: int) -> int: ...
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@final
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def method(self, x=None):
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...
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2019-04-15 19:57:52 -04:00
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It is an error to use ``@final`` on a non-method function.
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The ``Final`` annotation
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------------------------
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The ``typing.Final`` type qualifier is used to indicate that a
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variable or attribute should not be reassigned, redefined, or overridden.
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Syntax
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~~~~~~
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``Final`` may be used in one of several forms:
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* With an explicit type, using the syntax ``Final[<type>]``. Example::
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ID: Final[float] = 1
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* With no type annotation. Example::
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ID: Final = 1
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The typechecker should apply its usual type inference mechanisms to
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determine the type of ``ID`` (here, likely, ``int``). Note that unlike for
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generic classes this is *not* the same as ``Final[Any]``.
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* In class bodies and stub files you can omit the right hand side and just write
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``ID: Final[float]``. If the right hand side is omitted, there must
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be an explicit type argument to ``Final``.
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* Finally, as ``self.id: Final = 1`` (also optionally with a type in
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square brackets). This is allowed *only* in ``__init__`` methods, so
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that the final instance attribute is assigned only once when an
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instance is created.
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Semantics and examples
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The two main rules for defining a final name are:
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* There can be *at most one* final declaration per module or class for
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a given attribute. There can't be separate class-level and instance-level
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constants with the same name.
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* There must be *exactly one* assignment to a final name.
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This means a type checker should prevent further assignments to final
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names in type-checked code::
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from typing import Final
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RATE: Final = 3000
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class Base:
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DEFAULT_ID: Final = 0
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RATE = 300 # Error: can't assign to final attribute
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Base.DEFAULT_ID = 1 # Error: can't override a final attribute
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2019-05-08 17:36:02 -04:00
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Note that a type checker need not allow ``Final`` declarations inside loops
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since the runtime will see multiple assignments to the same variable in
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subsequent iterations.
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Additionally, a type checker should prevent final attributes from
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being overridden in a subclass::
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from typing import Final
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class Window:
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BORDER_WIDTH: Final = 2.5
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...
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class ListView(Window):
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BORDER_WIDTH = 3 # Error: can't override a final attribute
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A final attribute declared in a class body without an initializer must
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be initialized in the ``__init__`` method (except in stub files)::
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class ImmutablePoint:
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x: Final[int]
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y: Final[int] # Error: final attribute without an initializer
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def __init__(self) -> None:
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self.x = 1 # Good
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Type checkers should infer a final attribute that is initialized in
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a class body as being a class variable. Variables should not be annotated
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with both ``ClassVar`` and ``Final``.
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``Final`` may only be used as the outermost type in assignments or variable
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annotations. Using it in any other position is an error. In particular,
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``Final`` can't be used in annotations for function arguments::
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x: List[Final[int]] = [] # Error!
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def fun(x: Final[List[int]]) -> None: # Error!
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...
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Note that declaring a name as final only guarantees that the name will
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not be re-bound to another value, but does not make the value
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immutable. Immutable ABCs and containers may be used in combination
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with ``Final`` to prevent mutating such values::
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x: Final = ['a', 'b']
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x.append('c') # OK
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y: Final[Sequence[str]] = ['a', 'b']
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y.append('x') # Error: "Sequence[str]" has no attribute "append"
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z: Final = ('a', 'b') # Also works
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Type checkers should treat uses of a final name that was initialized
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with a literal as if it was replaced by the literal. For example, the
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following should be allowed::
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from typing import NamedTuple, Final
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X: Final = "x"
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Y: Final = "y"
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N = NamedTuple("N", [(X, int), (Y, int)])
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Reference Implementation
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========================
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2020-08-07 12:35:20 -04:00
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The mypy [#mypy]_ type checker supports ``Final`` and ``final``. A
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reference implementation of the runtime component is provided in the
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``typing_extensions`` [#typing_extensions]_ module.
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Rejected/deferred Ideas
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=======================
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The name ``Const`` was also considered as the name for the ``Final``
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type annotation. The name ``Final`` was chosen instead because the
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concepts are related and it seemed best to be consistent between them.
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We considered using a single name ``Final`` instead of introducing
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``final`` as well, but ``@Final`` just looked too weird to us.
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A related feature to final classes would be Scala-style sealed
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classes, where a class is allowed to be inherited only by classes
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defined in the same module. Sealed classes seem most useful in
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combination with pattern matching, so it does not seem to justify the
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complexity in our case. This could be revisited in the future.
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2019-05-10 21:40:46 -04:00
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It would be possible to have the ``@final`` decorator on classes
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dynamically prevent subclassing at runtime. Nothing else in ``typing``
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does any runtime enforcement, though, so ``final`` will not either.
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A workaround for when both runtime enforcement and static checking is
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desired is to use this idiom (possibly in a support module)::
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if typing.TYPE_CHECKING:
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from typing import final
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else:
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from runtime_final import final
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References
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==========
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.. [#mypy] http://www.mypy-lang.org/
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2019-06-12 09:55:24 -04:00
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.. [#typing_extensions] https://github.com/python/typing/tree/master/typing_extensions
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Copyright
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=========
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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..
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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sentence-end-double-space: t
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fill-column: 70
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coding: utf-8
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End:
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