python-peps/pep-0570.rst

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PEP: 570
Title: Python Positional-Only Parameters
Version: $Revision$
Last-Modified: $Date$
Author: Larry Hastings <larry@hastings.org>,
Pablo Galindo <pablogsal@gmail.com>,
Mario Corchero <mariocj89@gmail.com>
Discussions-To: Python-Dev <python-dev@python.org>
Status: Draft
Type: Standards Track
Content-Type: text/x-rst
Created: 20-Jan-2018
========
Overview
========
This PEP proposes a syntax for positional-only parameters in Python.
Positional-only parameters are parameters without an externally-usable
name; when a function accepting positional-only parameters is called,
positional arguments are mapped to these parameters based solely on
their position.
=========
Rationale
=========
Python has always supported positional-only parameters.
Early versions of Python lacked the concept of specifying
parameters by name, so naturally all parameters were
positional-only. This changed around Python 1.0, when
all parameters suddenly became positional-or-keyword.
This allowed users to provide arguments to a function both
positionally or referencing the keyword used in the definition
of it. But, this is not always desired nor available as
even in current versions of Python, many CPython
"builtin" functions still only accept positional-only arguments.
Users might want to restrict their API to not allow for parameters
to be referenced via keywords, as that exposes the name of the
parameter as part of the API. If a user of said API starts using the
argument by keyword when calling it and then the parameter
gets renamed, it will be a breaking change. By using positional-only
parameters the developer can later change the name of an arguments or
transform them to ``*args`` without breaking the API.
Even if making arguments positional-only in a function can be achieved
by using ``*args`` parameters and extracting them one by one,
the solution is far from ideal and not as expressive as the one
proposed in this PEP, which targets providing syntax to specify
accepting a specific number of positional-only parameters. Also,
it makes the signature of the function ambiguous as users won't
know how many parameters the function takes by looking at ``help()``
or auto-generated documentation.
Additionally, this will bridge the gap we currently find between
builtin functions that can specify positional-only
parameters and pure Python implementations that lack the
syntax for it. The '/' syntax is already exposed in the
documentation of some builtins and interfaces generated by
the argument clinic. Making positional-only arguments a possibility
in Python will make the language more consistent and make it clearer
to users that positional-only arguments are allowed in builtins and argument
clinic C interfaces.
We can find positional-only arguments useful in several situations. Example:
we want to create a function that converts from one type to
another::
def as_my_type(x):
...
The name of the parameter provides no value whatsoever, and forces
the developer to maintain its name forever, as users might pass ``x`` as a
keyword.
Another good example is an API that wants to transmit the feeling
of ownership through positional arguments, see::
class MyDecorator:
def __init__(self, original_function):
...
Again we get no value from using keyword arguments here and it can limit
future evolution of the API. Say at a later time we want the decorator
to be able to take multiple functions, we will be forced to always keep
the original argument or we would potentially break users.
By being able to define positional-only arguments we can change the
name of those at will or even change them to ``*args``.
---------------------------------------------------
Positional-Only Parameter Semantics In Python Today
---------------------------------------------------
There are many, many examples of builtins that only
accept positional-only parameters. The resulting
semantics are easily experienced by the Python
programmer -- just try calling one, specifying its
arguments by name::
>>> help(pow)
...
pow(x, y, z=None, /)
...
>>> pow(x=5, y=3)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: pow() takes no keyword arguments
``pow()`` clearly expresses that its arguments are only positional
via the ``/`` marker, but this at the moment is only documentational,
Python developers cannot write such syntax.
In addition, there are some functions with particularly
interesting semantics:
* ``range()``, which accepts an optional parameter
to the *left* of its required parameter. [#RANGE]_
* ``dict()``, whose mapping/iterator parameter is optional and
semantically must be positional-only. Any externally
visible name for this parameter would occlude
that name going into the ``**kwarg`` keyword variadic
parameter dict! [#DICT]_
Obviously one can simulate any of these in pure Python code
by accepting ``(*args, **kwargs)`` and parsing the arguments
by hand. But this results in a disconnect between the
Python function signature and what the function actually accepts,
not to mention the work of implementing said argument parsing
and the lack of clarity in the resulting signature.
==========
Motivation
==========
The new syntax will allow developers to further control how their
API can be consumed. It will allow restricting the usage of keyword
arguments by adding the new type of positional-only ones.
A similar PEP with a broader scope (PEP 457) was proposed earlier
to define the syntax. This PEP builds partially on top of that,
to define and provide an implementation for the ``/`` syntax in
function signatures.
Providing positional-only arguments will allow for maintaining the
interface when creating pure Python implementation of C modules, which
provides not only the API benefits outlined in this document but it is
also faster. See this thread about converting keyword arguments to positional:
[#thread-keyword-to-positional]_ and PEP-399 [#PEP399]_, which requires the
same API for C accelerators as the Python implementation.
There have been multiple changes in builtin functions that moved away
from keyword arguments, like ``bool``, ``float``, ``list``, ``int``, ``tuple``
which is a non-backward compatible change. By having proper support for
positional-only arguments, these kind of APIs, where it is clear that
passing a keyword argument provides no clarity, it would be possible to
follow a similar approach as these builtins, without breaking users.
This is a well discussed, recurring topic on the Python mailing lists:
* September 2018: `Anders Hovmöller: [Python-ideas] Positional-only
parameters
<https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2018-September/053233.html>`_
* February 2017: `Victor Stinner: [Python-ideas] Positional-only
parameters
<https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2017-February/044879.html>`_,
`discussion continued in March
<https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2017-March/044956.html>`_
* February 2017: [#python-ideas-decorator-based]_
* March 2012: [#GUIDO]_
* May 2007: `George Sakkis: [Python-ideas] Positional only arguments
<https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2007-May/000704.html>`_
* May 2006: `Benji York: [Python-Dev] Positional-only Arguments
<https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2006-May/064790.html>`_
=================================================================
The Current State Of Documentation For Positional-Only Parameters
=================================================================
The documentation for positional-only parameters is incomplete
and inconsistent:
* Some functions denote optional groups of positional-only arguments
by enclosing them in nested square brackets. [#BORDER]_
* Some functions denote optional groups of positional-only arguments
by presenting multiple prototypes with varying numbers of
arguments. [#SENDFILE]_
* Some functions use *both* of the above approaches. [#RANGE]_ [#ADDCH]_
One more important idea to consider: currently in the documentation
there is no way to tell whether a function takes positional-only
parameters. ``open()`` accepts keyword arguments, ``ord()`` does
not, but there is no way of telling just by reading the
documentation.
====================
Syntax And Semantics
====================
From the "ten-thousand foot view", and ignoring ``*args`` and ``**kwargs``
for now, the grammar for a function definition currently looks like this::
def name(positional_or_keyword_parameters, *, keyword_only_parameters):
Building on that perspective, the new syntax for functions would look
like this::
def name(positional_only_parameters, /, positional_or_keyword_parameters,
*, keyword_only_parameters):
All parameters before the ``/`` are positional-only. If ``/`` is
not specified in a function signature, that function does not
accept any positional-only parameters.
The logic around optional values for positional-only argument
remains the same as the one for positional-or-keyword. Once
a positional-only argument is provided with a default,
the following positional-only and positional-or-keyword argument
needs to have a default as well. Positional-only parameters that
dont have a default value are "required" positional-only parameters.
Therefore the following are valid signatures::
def name(p1, p2, /, p_or_kw, *, kw):
def name(p1, p2=None, /, p_or_kw=None, *, kw):
def name(p1, p2=None, /, *, kw):
def name(p1, p2=None, /):
def name(p1, p2, /, p_or_kw):
def name(p1, p2, /):
Whilst the followings are not::
def name(p1, p2=None, /, p_or_kw, *, kw):
def name(p1=None, p2, /, p_or_kw=None, *, kw):
def name(p1=None, p2, /):
==========================
Full grammar specification
==========================
A draft of the proposed grammar specification is::
new_typedargslist:
tfpdef ['=' test] (',' tfpdef ['=' test])* ',' '/' [',' [typedargslist]] | typedargslist
new_varargslist:
vfpdef ['=' test] (',' vfpdef ['=' test])* ',' '/' [',' [varargslist]] | varargslist
It will be added to the actual typedargslist and varargslist but for easier
discussion it is presented as new_typedargslist and new_varargslist. Also,
notice that using a construction with two new rules (new_varargslist and
new_varargslist) is not possible with the current parser as the rule is not
LL(1). This is the reason the rule needs to be included in the existing
typedargslist and varargslist (in the same way keyword-only arguments were
introduced).
==============
Implementation
==============
An initial implementation that passes the CPython test suite is available
for evaluation [#posonly-impl]_.
The advantages of this implementation involve speed, consistency with the
implementation of keyword-only parameters as in PEP 3102 and a simpler
implementation of all the tools and modules that will be impacted by
this change.
==============
Rejected Ideas
==============
----------
Do Nothing
----------
Always an option, just not adding it. It was considered
though that the benefits of adding it is worth the complexity
it adds to the language.
---------------------
After marker proposal
---------------------
A complaint against the proposal is the fact that the modifier of
the signature impacts the tokens already passed.
This might make it confusing to users to read functions
with many arguments. Example::
def really_bad_example_of_a_python_function(fist_long_argument, second_long_argument,
third_long_argument, /):
It is not until reaching the end of the signature that the reader
realizes the ``/``, and therefore the fact that the arguments are
position-only. This deviates from how the keyword-only marker works.
That said we could not find an implementation that would modify the
arguments after the marker, as that will force the one before the
marker to be position-only as well. Example::
def (x, y, /, z):
If we define that ``/`` makes only z position-only it won't be possible
to call x and y via keyword argument. Finding a way to work around it
will add confusion given that at the moment keyword arguments cannot be
followed by positional arguments. ``/`` will therefore make both the
preceding and following parameters position-only.
-------------------
Per-argument marker
-------------------
Using a per-argument marker might be an option as well. The approach
basically adds a token to each of the arguments that are position only
and requires those to be placed together. Example::
def (.arg1, .arg2, arg3):
Note the dot on arg1 and arg2. Even if this approach might look easier
to read, it has been discarded as ``/`` goes further in line with the
keyword-only approach and is less error-prone.
There are some libraries that use leading underscore[#leading-underscore]_
to mark those arguments as positional-only.
----------------
Using decorators
----------------
It has been suggested on python-ideas [#python-ideas-decorator-based]_ to
provide a decorator written in Python as an implementation for this feature.
This approach has the advantage that keeps parameter declaration more easy to
read but also introduces an asymmetry on how parameter behaviour is declared.
Also, as the ``/`` syntax is already introduced for C functions, this
inconsistency will make it more difficult to implement all tools and modules
that deal with this syntax including but not limited to, the argument clinic,
the inspect module and the ast module. Another disadvantage of this approach
is that calling the decorated functions will be slower than the functions
generated if the feature was implemented directly in C.
======
Thanks
======
Credit for most of the content of this PEP is contained in Larry Hastingss
PEP 457.
Credit for the use of '/' as the separator between positional-only and
positional-or-keyword parameters go to Guido van Rossum, in a proposal from
2012. [#GUIDO]_
Credit for discussion about the simplification of the grammar goes to
Braulio Valdivieso.
.. [#DICT]
http://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#dict
.. [#RANGE]
http://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#func-range
.. [#BORDER]
http://docs.python.org/3/library/curses.html#curses.window.border
.. [#SENDFILE]
http://docs.python.org/3/library/os.html#os.sendfile
.. [#ADDCH]
http://docs.python.org/3/library/curses.html#curses.window.addch
.. [#GUIDO]
Guido van Rossum, posting to python-ideas, March 2012:
https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2012-March/014364.html
and
https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2012-March/014378.html
and
https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2012-March/014417.html
.. [#PEP306]
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0306/
.. [#PEP399]
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0399/
.. [#python-ideas-decorator-based]
https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2017-February/044888.html
.. [#posonly-impl]
https://github.com/pablogsal/cpython_positional_only
.. [#thread-keyword-to-positional]
https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2016-January/037874.html
.. [#leading-underscore]
https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2018-September/053319.html
=========
Copyright
=========
This document has been placed in the public domain.