@Aran-Fey I think Any acts differently to object but I can't remember how. You could possibly ask on the Python Discourse/typing-sig mailing list, a lot of the main developers for typing, mypy, pyright, etc are around.
The difference is that Any can do everything and object can't do anything. If you have x: object, then x() is an error, x.y is an error, x[0] is an error, etc. With Any, all of that is fine
My current stance is "Never use Any", which is a problem because any opinion containing the word "always" or "never" is automatically wrong
I think object doesn't play well with Protocol too. I honestly can't remember all the quirks to object. I only used object as a stop-gap when removing all Anys from Nox.
@Aran-Fey typing is not a complete type system. Until ParamSpec was introduce you had to disable type checking for a lot of decorators. The more metaprograming or duck-typing the interaction you want the more you need Any, because typing just doesn't support the interactions you want. You can possibly disable type checking by using object instead. But if you want to obliterate the type information I'd prefer to use Protocols instead.
What I mean is that let's say there's a function def f(t: T). Will that function accept both? I'm not interested in a case where some type is subtracted from another type.
What does the slash do? Was it the solution? Or was the solution about having the function take a HasSub directly, instead of a TypeVar with it as a bound?
Oh wow I tested it, and just adding the slash solved it, I'm still using the TypeVar!
btw, if I have a function that takes an Iterable and returns an Iterator, and I just want to take that argument and return it as is (in one of the if branches), what's the best way to convert it? Currently I'm doing return ( item for item in iterable )