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Author SHA1 Message Date
David Peter
0092794302
[ty] Use typing.Self for the first parameter of instance methods (#20517)
## Summary

Modify the (external) signature of instance methods such that the first
parameter uses `Self` unless it is explicitly annotated. This allows us
to correctly type-check more code, and allows us to infer correct return
types for many functions that return `Self`. For example:

```py
from pathlib import Path
from datetime import datetime, timedelta

reveal_type(Path(".config") / ".ty")  # now Path, previously Unknown

def _(dt: datetime, delta: timedelta):
    reveal_type(dt - delta)  # now datetime, previously Unknown
```

part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/159

## Performance

I ran benchmarks locally on `attrs`, `freqtrade` and `colour`, the
projects with the largest regressions on CodSpeed. I see much smaller
effects locally, but can definitely reproduce the regression on `attrs`.
From looking at the profiling results (on Codspeed), it seems that we
simply do more type inference work, which seems plausible, given that we
now understand much more return types (of many stdlib functions). In
particular, whenever a function uses an implicit `self` and returns
`Self` (without mentioning `Self` anywhere else in its signature), we
will now infer the correct type, whereas we would previously return
`Unknown`. This also means that we need to invoke the generics solver in
more cases. Comparing half a million lines of log output on attrs, I can
see that we do 5% more "work" (number of lines in the log), and have a
lot more `apply_specialization` events (7108 vs 4304). On freqtrade, I
see similar numbers for `apply_specialization` (11360 vs 5138 calls).
Given these results, I'm not sure if it's generally worth doing more
performance work, especially since none of the code modifications
themselves seem to be likely candidates for regressions.

| Command | Mean [ms] | Min [ms] | Max [ms] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `./ty_main check /home/shark/ecosystem/attrs` | 92.6 ± 3.6 | 85.9 |
102.6 | 1.00 |
| `./ty_self check /home/shark/ecosystem/attrs` | 101.7 ± 3.5 | 96.9 |
113.8 | 1.10 ± 0.06 |

| Command | Mean [ms] | Min [ms] | Max [ms] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `./ty_main check /home/shark/ecosystem/freqtrade` | 599.0 ± 20.2 |
568.2 | 627.5 | 1.00 |
| `./ty_self check /home/shark/ecosystem/freqtrade` | 607.9 ± 11.5 |
594.9 | 626.4 | 1.01 ± 0.04 |

| Command | Mean [ms] | Min [ms] | Max [ms] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `./ty_main check /home/shark/ecosystem/colour` | 423.9 ± 17.9 | 394.6
| 447.4 | 1.00 |
| `./ty_self check /home/shark/ecosystem/colour` | 426.9 ± 24.9 | 373.8
| 456.6 | 1.01 ± 0.07 |

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests

## Ecosystem report

* apprise: ~300 new diagnostics related to problematic stubs in apprise
😩
* attrs: a new true positive, since [this
function](4e2c89c823/tests/test_make.py (L2135))
is missing a `@staticmethod`?
* Some legitimate true positives
* sympy: lots of new `invalid-operator` false positives in [matrix
multiplication](cf9f4b6805/sympy/matrices/matrixbase.py (L3267-L3269))
due to our limited understanding of [generic `Callable[[Callable[[T1,
T2], T3]], Callable[[T1, T2], T3]]` "identity"
types](cf9f4b6805/sympy/core/decorators.py (L83-L84))
of decorators. This is not related to type-of-self.

## Typing conformance results

The changes are all correct, except for
```diff
+generics_self_usage.py:50:5: error[invalid-assignment] Object of type `def foo(self) -> int` is not assignable to `(typing.Self, /) -> int`
```
which is related to an assignability problem involving type variables on
both sides:
```py
class CallableAttribute:
    def foo(self) -> int:
        return 0

    bar: Callable[[Self], int] = foo  # <- we currently error on this assignment
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Shaygan Hooshyari <sh.hooshyari@gmail.com>
2025-09-29 21:08:08 +02:00
David Peter
25cbf38a47
[ty] Patch Self for fallback-methods on NamedTuples and TypedDicts (#20328)
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## Summary

We use classes like
[`_typeshed._type_checker_internals.NamedTupleFallback`](d9c76e1d9f/stdlib/_typeshed/_type_checker_internals.pyi (L54-L75))
to tack on additional attributes/methods to instances of user-defined
`NamedTuple`s (or `TypedDict`s), even though these classes are not
present in the MRO of those types.

The problem is that those classes use implicit and explicit `Self`
annotations which refer to `NamedTupleFallback` itself, instead of to
the actual type that we're adding those methods to:
```py
class NamedTupleFallback(tuple[Any, ...]):
    # […]
    def _replace(self, **kwargs: Any) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...
```

In effect, when we access `_replace` on an instance of a custom
`NamedTuple` instance, its `self` parameter and return type refer to the
wrong `Self`. This leads to incorrect *"Argument to bound method
`_replace` is incorrect: Argument type `Person` does not satisfy upper
bound `NamedTupleFallback` of type variable `Self`"* errors on #18007.
It would also lead to similar errors on `TypedDict`s, if they would
already implement assignability properly.


## Test Plan

I applied the following patch to typeshed and verified that no errors
appear anymore.

<details>

```diff
diff --git a/crates/ty_vendored/vendor/typeshed/stdlib/_typeshed/_type_checker_internals.pyi b/crates/ty_vendored/vendor/typeshed/stdlib/_typeshed/_type_checker_internals.pyi
index feb22aae00..8e41034f19 100644
--- a/crates/ty_vendored/vendor/typeshed/stdlib/_typeshed/_type_checker_internals.pyi
+++ b/crates/ty_vendored/vendor/typeshed/stdlib/_typeshed/_type_checker_internals.pyi
@@ -29,27 +29,27 @@ class TypedDictFallback(Mapping[str, object], metaclass=ABCMeta):
         __readonly_keys__: ClassVar[frozenset[str]]
         __mutable_keys__: ClassVar[frozenset[str]]
 
-    def copy(self) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...
+    def copy(self: typing_extensions.Self) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...
     # Using Never so that only calls using mypy plugin hook that specialize the signature
     # can go through.
-    def setdefault(self, k: Never, default: object) -> object: ...
+    def setdefault(self: typing_extensions.Self, k: Never, default: object) -> object: ...
     # Mypy plugin hook for 'pop' expects that 'default' has a type variable type.
-    def pop(self, k: Never, default: _T = ...) -> object: ...  # pyright: ignore[reportInvalidTypeVarUse]
-    def update(self, m: typing_extensions.Self, /) -> None: ...
-    def __delitem__(self, k: Never) -> None: ...
-    def items(self) -> dict_items[str, object]: ...
-    def keys(self) -> dict_keys[str, object]: ...
-    def values(self) -> dict_values[str, object]: ...
+    def pop(self: typing_extensions.Self, k: Never, default: _T = ...) -> object: ...  # pyright: ignore[reportInvalidTypeVarUse]
+    def update(self: typing_extensions.Self, m: typing_extensions.Self, /) -> None: ...
+    def __delitem__(self: typing_extensions.Self, k: Never) -> None: ...
+    def items(self: typing_extensions.Self) -> dict_items[str, object]: ...
+    def keys(self: typing_extensions.Self) -> dict_keys[str, object]: ...
+    def values(self: typing_extensions.Self) -> dict_values[str, object]: ...
     @overload
-    def __or__(self, value: typing_extensions.Self, /) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...
+    def __or__(self: typing_extensions.Self, value: typing_extensions.Self, /) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...
     @overload
-    def __or__(self, value: dict[str, Any], /) -> dict[str, object]: ...
+    def __or__(self: typing_extensions.Self, value: dict[str, Any], /) -> dict[str, object]: ...
     @overload
-    def __ror__(self, value: typing_extensions.Self, /) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...
+    def __ror__(self: typing_extensions.Self, value: typing_extensions.Self, /) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...
     @overload
-    def __ror__(self, value: dict[str, Any], /) -> dict[str, object]: ...
+    def __ror__(self: typing_extensions.Self, value: dict[str, Any], /) -> dict[str, object]: ...
     # supposedly incompatible definitions of __or__ and __ior__
-    def __ior__(self, value: typing_extensions.Self, /) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...  # type: ignore[misc]
+    def __ior__(self: typing_extensions.Self, value: typing_extensions.Self, /) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...  # type: ignore[misc]
 
 # Fallback type providing methods and attributes that appear on all `NamedTuple` types.
 class NamedTupleFallback(tuple[Any, ...]):
@@ -61,18 +61,18 @@ class NamedTupleFallback(tuple[Any, ...]):
         __orig_bases__: ClassVar[tuple[Any, ...]]
 
     @overload
-    def __init__(self, typename: str, fields: Iterable[tuple[str, Any]], /) -> None: ...
+    def __init__(self: typing_extensions.Self, typename: str, fields: Iterable[tuple[str, Any]], /) -> None: ...
     @overload
     @typing_extensions.deprecated(
         "Creating a typing.NamedTuple using keyword arguments is deprecated and support will be removed in Python 3.15"
     )
-    def __init__(self, typename: str, fields: None = None, /, **kwargs: Any) -> None: ...
+    def __init__(self: typing_extensions.Self, typename: str, fields: None = None, /, **kwargs: Any) -> None: ...
     @classmethod
     def _make(cls, iterable: Iterable[Any]) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...
-    def _asdict(self) -> dict[str, Any]: ...
-    def _replace(self, **kwargs: Any) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...
+    def _asdict(self: typing_extensions.Self) -> dict[str, Any]: ...
+    def _replace(self: typing_extensions.Self, **kwargs: Any) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...
     if sys.version_info >= (3, 13):
-        def __replace__(self, **kwargs: Any) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...
+        def __replace__(self: typing_extensions.Self, **kwargs: Any) -> typing_extensions.Self: ...
 
 # Non-default variations to accommodate couroutines, and `AwaitableGenerator` having a 4th type parameter.
 _S = TypeVar("_S")
```

</details>
2025-09-15 16:21:53 +02:00
Alex Waygood
f77315776c
[ty] Better error message for attempting to assign to a read-only property (#20150) 2025-08-29 13:22:23 +00:00
Alex Waygood
4242905b36
[ty] Detect NamedTuple classes where fields without default values follow fields with default values (#19945) 2025-08-19 08:56:08 +00:00
Alex Waygood
fbf24be8ae
[ty] Detect illegal multiple inheritance with NamedTuple (#19943) 2025-08-18 12:03:01 +00:00
Douglas Creager
b892e4548e
[ty] Track when type variables are inferable or not (#19786)
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`Type::TypeVar` now distinguishes whether the typevar in question is
inferable or not.

A typevar is _not inferable_ inside the body of the generic class or
function that binds it:

```py
def f[T](t: T) -> T:
    return t
```

The infered type of `t` in the function body is `TypeVar(T,
NotInferable)`. This represents how e.g. assignability checks need to be
valid for all possible specializations of the typevar. Most of the
existing assignability/etc logic only applies to non-inferable typevars.

Outside of the function body, the typevar is _inferable_:

```py
f(4)
```

Here, the parameter type of `f` is `TypeVar(T, Inferable)`. This
represents how e.g. assignability doesn't need to hold for _all_
specializations; instead, we need to find the constraints under which
this specific assignability check holds.

This is in support of starting to perform specialization inference _as
part of_ performing the assignability check at the call site.

In the [[POPL2015][]] paper, this concept is called _monomorphic_ /
_polymorphic_, but I thought _non-inferable_ / _inferable_ would be
clearer for us.

Depends on #19784 

[POPL2015]: https://doi.org/10.1145/2676726.2676991

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-08-16 18:25:03 -04:00
Alex Waygood
f4d8826428
[ty] Fix error message for invalidly providing type arguments to NamedTuple when it occurs in a type expression (#19940) 2025-08-16 17:45:15 +00:00
Alex Waygood
26d6c3831f
[ty] Represent NamedTuple as an opaque special form, not a class (#19915) 2025-08-15 18:20:14 +01:00
Alex Waygood
f6093452ed
[ty] Synthesize read-only properties for all declared members on NamedTuple classes (#19899) 2025-08-14 21:25:45 +00:00
Alex Waygood
9f6146a13d
[ty] Add precise inference for indexing, slicing and unpacking NamedTuple instances (#19560)
Co-authored-by: Brent Westbrook <brentrwestbrook@gmail.com>
2025-08-13 15:19:44 +00:00
Douglas Creager
585ce12ace
[ty] typing.Self is bound by the method, not the class (#19784)
This fixes our logic for binding a legacy typevar with its binding
context. (To recap, a legacy typevar starts out "unbound" when it is
first created, and each time it's used in a generic class or function,
we "bind" it with the corresponding `Definition`.)

We treat `typing.Self` the same as a legacy typevar, and so we apply
this binding logic to it too. Before, we were using the enclosing class
as its binding context. But that's not correct — it's the method where
`typing.Self` is used that binds the typevar. (Each invocation of the
method will find a new specialization of `Self` based on the specific
instance type containing the invoked method.)

This required plumbing through some additional state to the
`in_type_expression` method.

This also revealed that we weren't handling `Self`-typed instance
attributes correctly (but were coincidentally not getting the expected
false positive diagnostics).
2025-08-06 17:26:17 -04:00
Douglas Creager
06cd249a9b
[ty] Track different uses of legacy typevars, including context when rendering typevars (#19604)
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This PR introduces a few related changes:

- We now keep track of each time a legacy typevar is bound in a
different generic context (e.g. class, function), and internally create
a new `TypeVarInstance` for each usage. This means the rest of the code
can now assume that salsa-equivalent `TypeVarInstance`s refer to the
same typevar, even taking into account that legacy typevars can be used
more than once.

- We also go ahead and track the binding context of PEP 695 typevars.
That's _much_ easier to track since we have the binding context right
there during type inference.

- With that in place, we can now include the name of the binding context
when rendering typevars (e.g. `T@f` instead of `T`)
2025-08-01 12:20:32 -04:00
Matthew Mckee
e8ea40012a
[ty] Add generic inference for dataclasses (#18443)
## Summary

An issue seen here https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/500

The `__init__` method of dataclasses had no inherited generic context,
so we could not infer the type of an instance from a constructor call
with generics

## Test Plan

Add tests to classes.md` in generics folder
2025-06-03 09:59:43 -07:00
David Peter
e67b35743a
[ty] NamedTuple 'fallback' attributes (#18127)
## Summary

Add various attributes to `NamedTuple` classes/instances that are
available at runtime.

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/417

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests
2025-05-16 12:56:43 +02:00
David Peter
97d7b46936
[ty] Do not look up __init__ on instances (#18092)
## Summary

Dunder methods are never looked up on instances. We do this implicitly
in `try_call_dunder`, but the corresponding flag was missing in the
instance-construction code where we use `member_lookup_with_policy`
directly.

fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/322

## Test Plan

Added regression test.
2025-05-14 15:33:42 +02:00
Abhijeet Prasad Bodas
235b74a310
[ty] Add more tests for NamedTuples (#17975)
## Summary

Add more tests and TODOs for `NamedTuple` support, based on the typing
spec: https://typing.python.org/en/latest/spec/namedtuples.html

## Test Plan

This PR adds new tests.
2025-05-10 10:46:08 +02:00
Alex Waygood
d1bb10a66b
[ty] Understand classes that inherit from subscripted Protocol[] as generic (#17832) 2025-05-09 17:39:15 +01:00
Micha Reiser
b51c4f82ea
Rename Red Knot (#17820) 2025-05-03 19:49:15 +02:00
Renamed from crates/red_knot_python_semantic/resources/mdtest/named_tuple.md (Browse further)