Isn't there Pyright integration for PyCharm, which would offer the same type checking capabilities from VSCode (since it uses Pyright afaik) into PyCharm?
No, I don't think I need anything aside from One. Quantities can be combined via multiplication and division (like acceleration = m/s²), and One represents the "neutral" value for those. Other numbers wouldn't serve any purpose, I don't think?
Somewhat surprisingly, the static typing turned out to be easier than the runtime aspect. Now I have to figure out stuff like how to convert lightyears/fahrenheit to meters/celsius and what happens if you add two temperatures
Oh nice. Possibly unneeded advice -- previously I came across color.graph which allows transforming between colours by traversing a graph. A similar approach may be useful. But yeah sounds like a bit of a pain :)
@Peilonrayz The relevant keyword here is dimensionless quantity. You can often end up having no unit when dealing with ratios - representing that as the "unit" 1 is useful to avoid special-casing this.
@MisterMiyagi 1 makes a lot of sense -- since Div[1, T] is likely very handy to special case. Interestingly pi is listed as a dimensionless quantity -- but on further thought special casing pi in the type systems seems like a bit of a pain.
So, apparently it's caused by the @functools.lru_cache(None) on my __mul__ method, but... I'm sure I already tried removing that earlier and it didn't change anything :/
I seem to have a thing for premature caching. This isn't the first time caching things has caused me problems (last time it even made my code slower)
I guess we have different aims in general. I spend a lot of time abstracting away from defined objects into arrays for calculations, while you're doing a whole lot to type all of the objects themselves.
It sounds even dumber now that I've said it. I'm fine with seconds and ampere being instantiated and thrown away, but not with coulomb? Stupid brain optimizing the wrong things
@Aran-Fey I assume it's solving a different problem than yours (considering static typing), but are you aware of astropy.units? That's the go-to recommendation for units and it's pretty neat from what I can tell (never having needed it myself). But it looks very numpy specific which I assume is not your niche.