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00:07
Quick opinion check, Is stackoverflow.com/questions/34383559 a good enough duplicate for stackoverflow.com/questions/77026419 ? Or maybe someone has a better option?
 
9 hours later…
09:37
@Aran-Fey I frequently need Any when Iā€™m at the limit of what typing can express. An implementation of an @overload usually needs it.
09:49
You mean for the parameters? Wouldn't a Union work there?
10:02
I guess it's fine in cases where the type system really can't express the correct type. Although I would first try to come up with a reasonable approximation before I give up completely and resort to Any
And sometimes object might be a better fallback than Any
10:22
@Aran-Fey Not for generic utility functions. Consider zip which maps zip(:iter T1, :iter T2, iter T3, ...) -> iter (T1, T2, T3, ...). You can annotate some base-cases with typevars but the generic case involves arbitrary many types ā€“ no way to express that.
Ok, I see what you mean. How would you feel about using object in place of Any in that situation?
Both for the parameters as well as the return type
For the parameters, I would definitely use object. That way I can't accidentally use the variables incorrectly
def make_tuple(x: Any, y: Any) -> tuple[x, y]:
    x()  # oops
    x[3]  # oops
    return (x, y)
10:39
The return type should be Any so that it neatly fits into annotated variables without a cast. For the parameters I guess it doesn't matter, though if they are in types with variance Any may be needed.
I usually have this case with @overload as mentioned, and MyPy insists on the signatures being compatible then ā€“ Any is much simpler to beat the type checker into submission...
Hmm, I never thought about annotated variables. People do that?
I occasionally need it to help the type checker along. Usually I try to avoid it.
Any is nice if you're sure it'll be assigned to an annotated variable, but if it isn't annotated then I'd say it's worse than object
Any can easily fly under the radar and disable type checking for a variable for the rest of the function. Whereas if I return object you'll definitely notice that
(And if you don't, it's also fine)
11:03
Can we put this out of its misery please? I don't have the rep for delete votes :(
@Aran-Fey I have my type-checkers configured to consider Any a bug unless explicitly allowed. That makes type coercions work (foo: soeme_type = any_func()) but finds runaway Any.
Oooh, interesting
I understand that they don't have this enabled by default. But turning on strict type checking is really worth it if you have the time to get familiar with typing.
11:23
The OP deleted it (again) but changed their name in the meantime as an interesting twist. Too bad I flagged them anyway because half their answers are on old questions amounting only to "use pip install". I've stopped flagging most stuff but I kinda feel an affinity to Flask given that Davidism is one of us
Aaaand it's back!
 
4 hours later…
15:34
Can someone explain me why the height of a QTabWidget is negative?
I use: self.main_self.ui_scheduled_transmitions_create_window.tabs.geometry().height()
Before getting this height i use a QMovie to display a loading animation. I stop the animation and i run the resize method. In this method i use the above code which gives me negative value.

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