Since I'm just playing in my free time I might not be the one that should judge. Because I still use IDLE to write code, everything else seems to be a little bit too much for me. I think my biggest concern is that I just don't want to have an expensive linter on that might slow things down in way that makes me code under a false impression. But to be honest, I never gave it real chance.
@Arne Interesting, but that's almost completely useless IMO. What we really need is a way to take the parameters of an existing function. TypedDict doesn't help in a situation like this:
class Parent:
def frobnicate(self, x: int = 3) -> str:
...
class Child(Parent):
def frobnicate(self, *args, **kwargs, new_parameter: str = '') -> str:
print(new_parameter)
return super().frobnicate(*args, **kwargs)
If you have positional arguments you're screwed, and if you want to extend a method that wasn't defined with **kwargs: SomeTypedDict then you're also screwed
Not really? You can't create a ParamSpec based on the signature of an existing function, and if you do it the other way around (i.e. define the ParamSpec first and use it in the signature of the function) then you can't give your parameters names
Thinking about it, the solution with Args[...] and Kwargs[...] and ReturnType[...] wouldn't be great either. It would solve the problem for static type checkers, but not for tools that need the info at runtime
Want to use typer to automagically generate a CLI for Child.frobnicate? Too bad!
Cabbage. (off-topic, but y'all have been very helpful in the past.) I don't have 10k. I want to edit a CSS post. One change is 12.2 has been deleted -- could I ask: "is the post is salvageable (undeletable)?" if not I'll just delete 12.2, thanks!
@Aran-Fey I run into similar situations all the time... would be really cool if we could do anything to make 'unbound' ParamSpecs. :/ Or add Concatenate[str, Parent.frobnicate].
ParamSpecs kinda need to be upgraded in general. They only allow you to express the types of parameters, but parameters also have names and kinds (i.e. positional, keyword, etc)
Yeah. I'm somewhat hoping once the inline typed dict syntax stuff goes through, I'll be able to abuse dicts for P.kwargs... as a trade off I'd be happy to never use P.args again.
__annotations__ is located on the function so __wrapped__.__annotations__ would get you the original annotations. Not sure if wraps copies __annotations__, I'd assume not.
Oh yeah. You probably could make a typing only decorator with Concatenate. Albeit you won't have a kwarg, and you have the very odd @silly_wraps(Parent.frobnicate)def frobnicate(self, foo: Any, ...) -> Any.
@Peilonrayz 12.2 was closed by Michael Benjamin, and deleted by the OP, stackoverflow.com/users/13667392/samanthaj The question is probably salvageable, but the two answers aren't very impressive. One gives a solution using sass; the other reverses columns when it should reverse rows.
I suggest pinging Michael Benjamin. I suspect that he'll say that it's not worth bothering with. ;)
@matszwecja Don't they check your code first including for types ? Because if my program needs a minute to start I would blame myself first and after madness everything else :P
@Thingamabobs They do, but usually you have it set up with your code editor, like VSCode. Which means that it is running while you are writing the code, not when you are running the program - it has 0 impact on the runtime of the program itself. And it definitely takes less than a minute for it to run, even for bigger sized projects.
Well clustering my little knowledge and the random facts together that I have. I would guess they have at least a seperate thread where they read the code in memory or a file/file-like object where they run it.. So it is basically another program that runs constantly to what I run. Depending how much it needs to do and how much it offers, it gets naturally more expensive.
PEP 8 is nothing more than an suggestion and a try to implement a standard. It's good to get a hint from here and there, but I think it could be also bothersome. So still not convinced.
FWIW "pyright is implemented as a “lazy” or “just-in-time” type evaluator. Rather than analyzing all code in a module from top to bottom" - microsoft.github.io/pyright/#/mypy-comparison IIRC Eric Traut explained something about how pyright aims to only reading one file (the file which has changed) to determine type hints. The cache does get a little out of sync at times, but refreshing the file solves everything.
@matszwecja agree.. I mean more like things you do decide on your own.. For example.. Is self.MyThing = Object() genuinely a bad thing to distinguish between plain variables like self.n = 0
not using IDEs in 2023 is just crazy. There are so many must have features. Sure you can get them with plugins in vim, but you need the functionality one way or another, just coding in text files is madness
@Thingamabobs Definitely not. It helps greatly even if only you work on the code, for example with what you yourself mentioned - writing parts of the code for you
If you tell your IDE with type hints that this list you are working on only contains class XYZ, IDE will be able to provide you with methods that are for this class, and not some unrelated ones.
For that particular plugin. But honestly, I don't see any strong arguments against using VSCode these days - it's a beast for development across so many languages
Well at some point I think I will learn more languages too. I just know python for good and a little bit tcl. But I think rust would be an interesting language to learn as well.
javascript also.. So I'm interested.. will note that, thanks.
Being able to see previews for documents like RST, Markdown and LaTeX is really nice too. When I do JS dev opening a browser in VSCode is surprisingly nice.
If you've not come across Git Graph, I'd recommend the addon a lot. Makes visualizing and interacting with the git history so easy, especially useful when I mess up.
while I'm here talking to you guys.. I asked myself when I create nested functions do they need to be computed over and over again or do they sit in memory since python is an interpreted language ?
You don't really gain much by doing this, in fact it slows method_a down because it'll define and recompile the other function every time it's called. Given that, it would probably be better to just prefix the function name with underscore to indicate it's a private method -- i.e. _method_b.
I s...
If you have def outer(): def inner(): ... return inner and you call outer() you will create a new inner(). If you call inner() you don't create a new function.
@Hakaishin Technically IDLE is better than a normal text editor, but yeah, it does have fewer features than most IDE...still doesn't mean you can't get used to it to be honest (although I don't use it, and prefer Pycharm, so what I'm saying probably contradict that fact)