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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`)
1 KiB
1 KiB
Builtin scope
Conditional local override of builtin
If a builtin name is conditionally shadowed by a local variable, a name lookup should union the builtin type with the conditionally-defined type:
def _(flag: bool) -> None:
if flag:
abs = 1
chr: int = 1
reveal_type(abs) # revealed: Literal[1] | (def abs(x: SupportsAbs[_T@abs], /) -> _T@abs)
reveal_type(chr) # revealed: Literal[1] | (def chr(i: SupportsIndex, /) -> str)
Conditionally global override of builtin
If a builtin name is conditionally shadowed by a global variable, a name lookup should union the builtin type with the conditionally-defined type:
def flag() -> bool:
return True
if flag():
abs = 1
chr: int = 1
def _():
# TODO: Should ideally be `Unknown | Literal[1] | (def abs(x: SupportsAbs[_T], /) -> _T)`
reveal_type(abs) # revealed: Unknown | Literal[1]
# TODO: Should ideally be `int | (def chr(i: SupportsIndex, /) -> str)`
reveal_type(chr) # revealed: int