python-peps/pep-0483.txt

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PEP: 483
Title: The Theory of Type Hints
Version: $Revision$
Last-Modified: $Date$
Author: Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org>
Discussions-To: Python-Ideas <python-ideas@python.org>
Status: Draft
Type: Informational
Content-Type: text/x-rst
Created: 19-Dec-2014
Post-History:
Resolution:
Abstract
========
This PEP lays out the theory referenced by PEP 484.
Introduction
============
This document lays out the theory of the new type hinting proposal for
Python 3.5. It's not quite a full proposal or specification because
there are many details that need to be worked out, but it lays out the
theory without which it is hard to discuss more detailed specifications.
We start by explaining gradual typing; then we state some conventions
and general rules; then we define the new special types (such as Union)
that can be used in annotations; and finally we define the approach to
generic types. (The latter section needs more fleshing out; sorry!)
Specification
=============
Summary of gradual typing
-------------------------
We define a new relationship, is-consistent-with, which is similar to
is-subclass-of, except it is not transitive when the new type **Any** is
involved. (Neither relationship is symmetric.) Assigning x to y is OK if
the type of x is consistent with the type of y. (Compare this to "... if
the type of x is a subclass of the type of y," which states one of the
fundamentals of OO programming.) The is-consistent-with relationship is
defined by three rules:
- A type t1 is consistent with a type t2 if t1 is a subclass of t2.
(But not the other way around.)
- **Any** is consistent with every type. (But **Any** is not a subclass
of every type.)
- Every type is a subclass of **Any**. (Which also makes every type
consistent with **Any**, via rule 1.)
That's all! See Jeremy Siek's blog post `What is Gradual
Typing <http://wphomes.soic.indiana.edu/jsiek/what-is-gradual-typing/>`_
for a longer explanation and motivation. Note that rule 3 places **Any**
at the root of the class graph. This makes it very similar to
**object**. The difference is that **object** is not consistent with
most types (e.g. you can't use an object() instance where an int is
expected). IOW both **Any** and **object** mean "any type is allowed"
when used to annotate an argument, but only **Any** can be passed no
matter what type is expected (in essence, **Any** shuts up complaints
from the static checker).
Here's an example showing how these rules work out in practice:
Say we have an Employee class, and a subclass Manager:
- class Employee: ...
- class Manager(Employee): ...
Let's say variable e is declared with type Employee:
- e = Employee() # type: Employee
Now it's okay to assign a Manager instance to e (rule 1):
- e = Manager()
It's not okay to assign an Employee instance to a variable declared with
type Manager:
- m = Manager() # type: Manager
- m = Employee() # Fails static check
However, suppose we have a variable whose type is **Any**:
- a = some\_func() # type: Any
Now it's okay to assign a to e (rule 2):
- e = a # OK
Of course it's also okay to assign e to a (rule 3), but we didn't need
the concept of consistency for that:
- a = e # OK
Notational conventions
----------------------
- t1, t2 etc. and u1, u2 etc. are types or classes. Sometimes we write
ti or tj to refer to "any of t1, t2, etc."
- X, Y etc. are type variables (defined with Var(), see below).
- C, D etc. are classes defined with a class statement.
- x, y etc. are objects or instances.
- We use the terms type and class interchangeably, and we assume
type(x) is x.\_\_class\_\_.
General rules
-------------
- Instance-ness is derived from class-ness, e.g. x is an instance of
t1 if type(x) is a subclass of t1.
- No types defined below (i.e. Any, Union etc.) can be instantiated.
(But non-abstract subclasses of Generic can be.)
- No types defined below can be subclassed, except for Generic and
classes derived from it.
- Where a type is expected, None can be substituted for type(None);
e.g. Union[t1, None] == Union[t1, type(None)].
Types
-----
- **Any**. Every class is a subclass of Any; however, to the static
type checker it is also consistent with every class (see above).
- **Union[t1, t2, ...]**. Classes that are subclass of at least one of
t1 etc. are subclasses of this. So are unions whose components are
all subclasses of t1 etc. (Example: Union[int, str] is a subclass of
Union[int, float, str].) The order of the arguments doesn't matter.
(Example: Union[int, str] == Union[str, int].) If ti is itself a
Union the result is flattened. (Example: Union[int, Union[float,
str]] == Union[int, float, str].) If ti and tj have a subclass
relationship, the less specific type survives. (Example:
Union[Employee, Manager] == Union[Employee].) Union[t1] returns just
t1. Union[] is illegal, so is Union[()]. Corollary: Union[..., Any,
...] returns Any; Union[..., object, ...] returns object; to cut a
tie, Union[Any, object] == Union[object, Any] == Any.
- **Optional[t1]**. Alias for Union[t1, None], i.e. Union[t1,
type(None)].
- **Tuple[t1, t2, ..., tn]**. A tuple whose items are instances of t1
etc.. Example: Tuple[int, float] means a tuple of two items, the
first is an int, the second a float; e.g., (42, 3.14). Tuple[u1, u2,
..., um] is a subclass of Tuple[t1, t2, ..., tn] if they have the
same length (n==m) and each ui is a subclass of ti. To spell the type
of the empty tuple, use Tuple[()]. There is no way to define a
variadic tuple type. (TODO: Maybe Tuple[t1, ...] with literal
ellipsis?)
- **Callable[[t1, t2, ..., tn], tr]**. A function with positional
argument types t1 etc., and return type tr. The argument list may be
empty (n==0). There is no way to indicate optional or keyword
arguments, nor varargs (we don't need to spell those often enough to
complicate the syntax - however, Reticulated Python has a useful idea
here). This is covariant in the return type, but contravariant in the
arguments. "Covariant" here means that for two callable types that
differ only in the return type, the subclass relationship for the
callable types follows that of the return types. (Example:
Callable[[], Manager] is a subclass of Callable[[], Employee].)
"Contravariant" here means that for two callable types that differ
only in the type of one argument, the subclass relationship for the
callable types goes in the opposite direction as for the argument
types. (Example: Callable[[Employee], None] is a subclass of
Callable[[Mananger], None]. Yes, you read that right.)
We might add:
- **Intersection[t1, t2, ...]**. Classes that are subclass of *each* of
t1, etc are subclasses of this. (Compare to Union, which has *at
least one* instead of *each* in its definition.) The order of the
arguments doesn't matter. Nested intersections are flattened, e.g.
Intersection[int, Intersection[float, str]] == Intersection[int,
float, str]. An intersection of fewer types is a subclass of an
intersection of more types, e.g. Intersection[int, str] is a subclass
of Intersection[int, float, str]. An intersection of one argument is
just that argument, e.g. Intersection[int] is int. When argument have
a subclass relationship, the more specific class survives, e.g.
Intersection[str, Employee, Manager] is Intersection[str, Manager].
Intersection[] is illegal, so is Intersection[()]. Corollary: Any
disappears from the argument list, e.g. Intersection[int, str, Any]
== Intersection[int, str]. Intersection[Any, object] is object. The
interaction between Intersection and Union is complex but should be
no surprise if you understand the interaction between intersections
and unions in set theory (note that sets of types can be infinite in
size, since there is no limit on the number of new subclasses).
Pragmatics
----------
Some things are irrelevant to the theory but make practical use more
convenient. (This is not a full list; I probably missed a few and some
are still controversial or not fully specified.)
- Type aliases, e.g.
* point = Tuple[float, float]
* def distance(p: point) -> float: ...
- Forward references via strings, e.g.
* class C:
+ def compare(self, other: "C") -> int: ...
- If a default of None is specified, the type is implicitly optional, e.g.
* def get(key: KT, default: VT = None) -> VT: ...
- Don't use dynamic type expressions; use builtins and imported types
only. No 'if'.
* def display(message: str if WINDOWS else bytes): # NOT OK
- Type declaration in comments, e.g.
* x = [] # type: Sequence[int]
- Type declarations using Undefined, e.g.
* x = Undefined(str)
- Other things, e.g. casts, overloading and stub modules; best left to an
actual PEP.
Generic types
-------------
(TODO: Explain more. See also the `mypy docs on
generics <http://mypy.readthedocs.org/en/latest/generics.html>`_.)
- **X = Var('X')**. Declares a unique type variable. The name must match
the variable name.
- **Y = Var('Y', t1, t2, ...).** Ditto, constrained to t1 etc. Behaves
like Union[t1, t2, ...] for most purposes, but when used as a type
variable, subclasses of t1 etc. are replaced by the most-derived base
class among t1 etc.
- Example of constrained type variables:
* AnyStr = Var('AnyStr', str, bytes)
* def longest(a: AnyStr, b: AnyStr) -> AnyStr:
- return a if len(a) >= len(b) else b
* x = longest('a', 'abc') # The inferred type for x is str
* y = longest('a', b'abc') # Fails static type check
* In this example, both arguments to longest() must have the same type
(str or bytes), and moreover, even if the arguments are instances of a
common str subclass, the return type is still str, not that subclass
(see next example).
- For comparison, if the type variable was unconstrained, the common
subclass would be chosen as the return type, e.g.:
* S = Var('S')
* def longest(a: S, b: S) -> S:
- return a if len(a) >= b else b
* class MyStr(str): ...
* x = longest(MyStr('a'), MyStr('abc'))
* The inferred type of x is MyStr (whereas in the AnyStr example it would
be str).
- Also for comparison, if a Union is used, the return type also has to be
a Union:
* U = Union[str, bytes]
* def longest(a: U, b: U) -> U:
- return a if len(a) >= b else b
* x = longest('a', 'abc')
* The inferred type of x is still Union[str, bytes], even though both
arguments are str.
- **class C(Generic[X, Y, ...]):** ... Define a generic class C over type
variables X etc. C itself becomes parameterizable, e.g. C[int, str, ...]
is a specific class with substitutions X->int etc.
- TODO: Explain use of generic types in function signatures. E.g.
Sequence[X], Sequence[int], Sequence[Tuple[X, Y, Z]], and mixtures.
Think about co\*variance. No gimmicks like deriving from
Sequence[Union[int, str]] or Sequence[Union[int, X]].
- **Protocol**. Similar to Generic but uses structural equivalence. (TODO:
Explain, and think about co\*variance.)
Predefined generic types and Protocols in typing.py
---------------------------------------------------
(See also the `mypy typing.py
module <https://github.com/JukkaL/typing/blob/master/typing.py>`_.)
- Everything from collections.abc (but Set renamed to AbstractSet).
- Dict, List, Set, a few more. (FrozenSet?)
- Pattern, Match. (Why?)
- IO, TextIO, BinaryIO. (Why?)
Copyright
=========
This document is licensed under the `Open Publication License`_.
References and Footnotes
========================
.. _Open Publication License: http://www.opencontent.org/openpub/
..
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