mirror of
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff.git
synced 2025-09-28 12:55:05 +00:00
More typos found by codespell (#14880)
This commit is contained in:
parent
533e8a6ee6
commit
64944f2cf5
5 changed files with 6 additions and 6 deletions
|
@ -47,7 +47,7 @@
|
|||
//! The **declared type** represents the code author's declaration (usually through a type
|
||||
//! annotation) that a given variable should not be assigned any type outside the declared type. In
|
||||
//! our model, declared types are also control-flow-sensitive; we allow the code author to
|
||||
//! explicitly re-declare the same variable with a different type. So for a given binding of a
|
||||
//! explicitly redeclare the same variable with a different type. So for a given binding of a
|
||||
//! variable, we will want to ask which declarations of that variable can reach that binding, in
|
||||
//! order to determine whether the binding is permitted, or should be a type error. For example:
|
||||
//!
|
||||
|
@ -62,7 +62,7 @@
|
|||
//! assignable to `str`. This is the purpose of declared types: they prevent accidental assignment
|
||||
//! of the wrong type to a variable.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! But in some cases it is useful to "shadow" or "re-declare" a variable with a new type, and we
|
||||
//! But in some cases it is useful to "shadow" or "redeclare" a variable with a new type, and we
|
||||
//! permit this, as long as it is done with an explicit re-annotation. So `path: Path =
|
||||
//! Path(path)`, with the explicit `: Path` annotation, is permitted.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -887,7 +887,7 @@ impl<'db> Type<'db> {
|
|||
Type::SubclassOf(_),
|
||||
) => true,
|
||||
(Type::SubclassOf(_), _) | (_, Type::SubclassOf(_)) => {
|
||||
// TODO: Once we have support for final classes, we can determine disjointness in some cases
|
||||
// TODO: Once we have support for final classes, we can determine disjointedness in some cases
|
||||
// here. However, note that it might be better to turn `Type::SubclassOf('FinalClass')` into
|
||||
// `Type::ClassLiteral('FinalClass')` during construction, instead of adding special cases for
|
||||
// final classes inside `Type::SubclassOf` everywhere.
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -656,7 +656,7 @@ where
|
|||
let elements = buffer.elements();
|
||||
|
||||
let recorded = if self.start > elements.len() {
|
||||
// May happen if buffer was rewinded.
|
||||
// May happen if buffer was rewound.
|
||||
&[]
|
||||
} else {
|
||||
&elements[self.start..]
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -282,7 +282,7 @@ impl<'a> Checker<'a> {
|
|||
// TODO(charlie): `noqa` directives are mostly enforced in `check_lines.rs`.
|
||||
// However, in rare cases, we need to check them here. For example, when
|
||||
// removing unused imports, we create a single fix that's applied to all
|
||||
// unused members on a single import. We need to pre-emptively omit any
|
||||
// unused members on a single import. We need to preemptively omit any
|
||||
// members from the fix that will eventually be excluded by a `noqa`.
|
||||
// Unfortunately, we _do_ want to register a `Diagnostic` for each
|
||||
// eventually-ignored import, so that our `noqa` counts are accurate.
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -267,7 +267,7 @@ impl<'a> Iterator for PathParamIterator<'a> {
|
|||
if c == '{' {
|
||||
if let Some((end, _)) = self.chars.by_ref().find(|&(_, ch)| ch == '}') {
|
||||
let param_content = &self.input[start + 1..end];
|
||||
// We ignore text after a colon, since those are path convertors
|
||||
// We ignore text after a colon, since those are path converters
|
||||
// See also: https://fastapi.tiangolo.com/tutorial/path-params/?h=path#path-convertor
|
||||
let param_name_end = param_content.find(':').unwrap_or(param_content.len());
|
||||
let param_name = ¶m_content[..param_name_end].trim();
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Add table
Add a link
Reference in a new issue