322 lines
12 KiB
ReStructuredText
322 lines
12 KiB
ReStructuredText
PEP: 560
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Title: Core support for typing module and generic types
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Author: Ivan Levkivskyi <levkivskyi@gmail.com>
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Status: Final
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Type: Standards Track
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Topic: Typing
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Created: 03-Sep-2017
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Python-Version: 3.7
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Post-History: 09-Sep-2017, 14-Nov-2017
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Resolution: https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2017-December/151038.html
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.. canonical-doc:: the documentation for
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:external+python:meth:`~object.__class_getitem__` and
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:external+python:meth:`~object.__mro_entries__`
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Abstract
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========
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Initially :pep:`484` was designed in such way that it would not introduce
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*any* changes to the core CPython interpreter. Now type hints and
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the ``typing`` module are extensively used by the community, e.g. :pep:`526`
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and :pep:`557` extend the usage of type hints, and the backport of ``typing``
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on PyPI has 1M downloads/month. Therefore, this restriction can be removed.
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It is proposed to add two special methods ``__class_getitem__`` and
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``__mro_entries__`` to the core CPython for better support of
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generic types.
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Rationale
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=========
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The restriction to not modify the core CPython interpreter led to some
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design decisions that became questionable when the ``typing`` module started
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to be widely used. There are three main points of concern:
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performance of the ``typing`` module, metaclass conflicts, and the large
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number of hacks currently used in ``typing``.
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Performance
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-----------
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The ``typing`` module is one of the heaviest and slowest modules in
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the standard library even with all the optimizations made. Mainly this is
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because subscripted generic types (see :pep:`484` for definition of terms used
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in this PEP) are class objects (see also [1]_). There are three main ways how
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the performance can be improved with the help of the proposed special methods:
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- Creation of generic classes is slow since the ``GenericMeta.__new__`` is
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very slow; we will not need it anymore.
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- Very long method resolution orders (MROs) for generic classes will be
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half as long; they are present because we duplicate the ``collections.abc``
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inheritance chain in ``typing``.
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- Instantiation of generic classes will be faster (this is minor however).
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Metaclass conflicts
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-------------------
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All generic types are instances of ``GenericMeta``, so if a user uses
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a custom metaclass, then it is hard to make a corresponding class generic.
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This is particularly hard for library classes that a user doesn't control.
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A workaround is to always mix-in ``GenericMeta``::
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class AdHocMeta(GenericMeta, LibraryMeta):
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pass
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class UserClass(LibraryBase, Generic[T], metaclass=AdHocMeta):
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...
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but this is not always practical or even possible. With the help of the
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proposed special attributes the ``GenericMeta`` metaclass will not be needed.
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Hacks and bugs that will be removed by this proposal
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----------------------------------------------------
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- ``_generic_new`` hack that exists because ``__init__`` is not called on
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instances with a type differing from the type whose ``__new__`` was called,
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``C[int]().__class__ is C``.
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- ``_next_in_mro`` speed hack will be not necessary since subscription will
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not create new classes.
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- Ugly ``sys._getframe`` hack. This one is particularly nasty since it looks
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like we can't remove it without changes outside ``typing``.
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- Currently generics do dangerous things with private ABC caches
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to fix large memory consumption that grows at least as O(N\ :sup:`2`),
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see [2]_. This point is also important because it was recently proposed to
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re-implement ``ABCMeta`` in C.
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- Problems with sharing attributes between subscripted generics,
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see [3]_. The current solution already uses ``__getattr__`` and ``__setattr__``,
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but it is still incomplete, and solving this without the current proposal
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will be hard and will need ``__getattribute__``.
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- ``_no_slots_copy`` hack, where we clean up the class dictionary on every
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subscription thus allowing generics with ``__slots__``.
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- General complexity of the ``typing`` module. The new proposal will not
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only allow to remove the above-mentioned hacks/bugs, but also simplify
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the implementation, so that it will be easier to maintain.
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Specification
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=============
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``__class_getitem__``
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---------------------
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The idea of ``__class_getitem__`` is simple: it is an exact analog of
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``__getitem__`` with an exception that it is called on a class that
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defines it, not on its instances. This allows us to avoid
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``GenericMeta.__getitem__`` for things like ``Iterable[int]``.
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The ``__class_getitem__`` is automatically a class method and
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does not require ``@classmethod`` decorator (similar to
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``__init_subclass__``) and is inherited like normal attributes.
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For example::
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class MyList:
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def __getitem__(self, index):
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return index + 1
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def __class_getitem__(cls, item):
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return f"{cls.__name__}[{item.__name__}]"
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class MyOtherList(MyList):
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pass
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assert MyList()[0] == 1
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assert MyList[int] == "MyList[int]"
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assert MyOtherList()[0] == 1
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assert MyOtherList[int] == "MyOtherList[int]"
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Note that this method is used as a fallback, so if a metaclass defines
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``__getitem__``, then that will have the priority.
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``__mro_entries__``
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-------------------
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If an object that is not a class object appears in the tuple of bases of
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a class definition, then method ``__mro_entries__`` is searched on it.
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If found, it is called with the original tuple of bases as an argument.
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The result of the call must be a tuple, that is unpacked in the base classes
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in place of this object. (If the tuple is empty, this means that the original
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bases is simply discarded.) If there are more than one object with
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``__mro_entries__``, then all of them are called with the same original tuple
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of bases. This step happens first in the process of creation of a class,
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all other steps, including checks for duplicate bases and MRO calculation,
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happen normally with the updated bases.
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Using the method API instead of just an attribute is necessary to avoid
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inconsistent MRO errors, and perform other manipulations that are currently
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done by ``GenericMeta.__new__``. The original bases are stored as
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``__orig_bases__`` in the class namespace (currently this is also done by
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the metaclass). For example::
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class GenericAlias:
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def __init__(self, origin, item):
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self.origin = origin
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self.item = item
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def __mro_entries__(self, bases):
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return (self.origin,)
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class NewList:
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def __class_getitem__(cls, item):
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return GenericAlias(cls, item)
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class Tokens(NewList[int]):
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...
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assert Tokens.__bases__ == (NewList,)
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assert Tokens.__orig_bases__ == (NewList[int],)
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assert Tokens.__mro__ == (Tokens, NewList, object)
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Resolution using ``__mro_entries__`` happens *only* in bases of a class
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definition statement. In all other situations where a class object is
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expected, no such resolution will happen, this includes ``isinstance``
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and ``issubclass`` built-in functions.
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NOTE: These two method names are reserved for use by the ``typing`` module
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and the generic types machinery, and any other use is discouraged.
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The reference implementation (with tests) can be found in [4]_, and
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the proposal was originally posted and discussed on the ``typing`` tracker,
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see [5]_.
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Dynamic class creation and ``types.resolve_bases``
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--------------------------------------------------
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``type.__new__`` will not perform any MRO entry resolution. So that a direct
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call ``type('Tokens', (List[int],), {})`` will fail. This is done for
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performance reasons and to minimize the number of implicit transformations.
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Instead, a helper function ``resolve_bases`` will be added to
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the ``types`` module to allow an explicit ``__mro_entries__`` resolution in
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the context of dynamic class creation. Correspondingly, ``types.new_class``
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will be updated to reflect the new class creation steps while maintaining
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the backwards compatibility::
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def new_class(name, bases=(), kwds=None, exec_body=None):
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resolved_bases = resolve_bases(bases) # This step is added
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meta, ns, kwds = prepare_class(name, resolved_bases, kwds)
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if exec_body is not None:
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exec_body(ns)
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ns['__orig_bases__'] = bases # This step is added
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return meta(name, resolved_bases, ns, **kwds)
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Using ``__class_getitem__`` in C extensions
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-------------------------------------------
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As mentioned above, ``__class_getitem__`` is automatically a class method
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if defined in Python code. To define this method in a C extension, one
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should use flags ``METH_O|METH_CLASS``. For example, a simple way to make
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an extension class generic is to use a method that simply returns the
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original class objects, thus fully erasing the type information at runtime,
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and deferring all check to static type checkers only::
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typedef struct {
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PyObject_HEAD
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/* ... your code ... */
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} SimpleGeneric;
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static PyObject *
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simple_class_getitem(PyObject *type, PyObject *item)
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{
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Py_INCREF(type);
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return type;
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}
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static PyMethodDef simple_generic_methods[] = {
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{"__class_getitem__", simple_class_getitem, METH_O|METH_CLASS, NULL},
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/* ... other methods ... */
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};
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PyTypeObject SimpleGeneric_Type = {
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PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT(NULL, 0)
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"SimpleGeneric",
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sizeof(SimpleGeneric),
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0,
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.tp_flags = Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT | Py_TPFLAGS_BASETYPE,
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.tp_methods = simple_generic_methods,
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};
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Such class can be used as a normal generic in Python type annotations
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(a corresponding stub file should be provided for static type checkers,
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see :pep:`484` for details)::
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from simple_extension import SimpleGeneric
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from typing import TypeVar
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T = TypeVar('T')
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Alias = SimpleGeneric[str, T]
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class SubClass(SimpleGeneric[T, int]):
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...
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data: Alias[int] # Works at runtime
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more_data: SubClass[str] # Also works at runtime
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Backwards compatibility and impact on users who don't use ``typing``
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====================================================================
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This proposal may break code that currently uses the names
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``__class_getitem__`` and ``__mro_entries__``. (But the language
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reference explicitly reserves *all* undocumented dunder names, and
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allows "breakage without warning"; see [6]_.)
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This proposal will support almost complete backwards compatibility with
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the current public generic types API; moreover the ``typing`` module is still
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provisional. The only two exceptions are that currently
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``issubclass(List[int], List)`` returns True, while with this proposal it will
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raise ``TypeError``, and ``repr()`` of unsubscripted user-defined generics
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cannot be tweaked and will coincide with ``repr()`` of normal (non-generic)
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classes.
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With the reference implementation I measured negligible performance effects
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(under 1% on a micro-benchmark) for regular (non-generic) classes. At the same
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time performance of generics is significantly improved:
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* ``importlib.reload(typing)`` is up to 7x faster
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* Creation of user defined generic classes is up to 4x faster (on a
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micro-benchmark with an empty body)
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* Instantiation of generic classes is up to 5x faster (on a micro-benchmark
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with an empty ``__init__``)
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* Other operations with generic types and instances (like method lookup and
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``isinstance()`` checks) are improved by around 10-20%
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* The only aspect that gets slower with the current proof of concept
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implementation is the subscripted generics cache look-up. However it was
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already very efficient, so this aspect gives negligible overall impact.
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References
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==========
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.. [1] Discussion following Mark Shannon's presentation at Language Summit
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(https://github.com/python/typing/issues/432)
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.. [2] Pull Request to implement shared generic ABC caches (merged)
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(https://github.com/python/typing/pull/383)
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.. [3] An old bug with setting/accessing attributes on generic types
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(https://github.com/python/typing/issues/392)
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.. [4] The reference implementation
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(https://github.com/ilevkivskyi/cpython/pull/2/files,
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https://github.com/ilevkivskyi/cpython/tree/new-typing)
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.. [5] Original proposal
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(https://github.com/python/typing/issues/468)
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.. [6] Reserved classes of identifiers
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(https://docs.python.org/3/reference/lexical_analysis.html#reserved-classes-of-identifiers)
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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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