mirror of
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff.git
synced 2025-09-29 05:15:12 +00:00

## Summary Add support for decorators on function as well as support for properties by adding special handling for `@property` and `@<name of property>.setter`/`.getter` decorators. closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/16987 ## Ecosystem results - ✔️ A lot of false positives are fixed by our new understanding of properties - 🔴 A bunch of new false positives (typically `possibly-unbound-attribute` or `invalid-argument-type`) occur because we currently do not perform type narrowing on attributes. And with the new understanding of properties, this becomes even more relevant. In many cases, the narrowing occurs through an assertion, so this is also something that we need to implement to get rid of these false positives. - 🔴 A few new false positives occur because we do not understand generics, and therefore some calls to custom setters fail. - 🔴 Similarly, some false positives occur because we do not understand protocols yet. - ✔️ Seems like a true positive to me. [The setter](e624d8edfa/src/packaging/specifiers.py (L752-L754)
) only accepts `bools`, but `None` is assigned in [this line](e624d8edfa/tests/test_specifiers.py (L688)
). ``` + error[lint:invalid-assignment] /tmp/mypy_primer/projects/packaging/tests/test_specifiers.py:688:9: Invalid assignment to data descriptor attribute `prereleases` on type `SpecifierSet` with custom `__set__` method ``` - ✔️ This is arguable also a true positive. The setter [here](0c6c75644f/rich/table.py (L359-L363)
) returns `Table`, but typeshed wants [setters to return `None`](bf8d2a9912/stdlib/builtins.pyi (L1298)
). ``` + error[lint:invalid-argument-type] /tmp/mypy_primer/projects/rich/rich/table.py:359:5: Object of type `Literal[padding]` cannot be assigned to parameter 2 (`fset`) of bound method `setter`; expected type `(Any, Any, /) -> None` ``` ## Follow ups - Fix the `@no_type_check` regression - Implement class decorators ## Test Plan New Markdown test suites for decorators and properties.
4.1 KiB
4.1 KiB
Tuple subscripts
Indexing
t = (1, "a", "b")
reveal_type(t[0]) # revealed: Literal[1]
reveal_type(t[1]) # revealed: Literal["a"]
reveal_type(t[-1]) # revealed: Literal["b"]
reveal_type(t[-2]) # revealed: Literal["a"]
reveal_type(t[False]) # revealed: Literal[1]
reveal_type(t[True]) # revealed: Literal["a"]
a = t[4] # error: [index-out-of-bounds]
reveal_type(a) # revealed: Unknown
b = t[-4] # error: [index-out-of-bounds]
reveal_type(b) # revealed: Unknown
Slices
def _(m: int, n: int):
t = (1, "a", None, b"b")
reveal_type(t[0:0]) # revealed: tuple[()]
reveal_type(t[0:1]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1]]
reveal_type(t[0:2]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1], Literal["a"]]
reveal_type(t[0:4]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1], Literal["a"], None, Literal[b"b"]]
reveal_type(t[0:5]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1], Literal["a"], None, Literal[b"b"]]
reveal_type(t[1:3]) # revealed: tuple[Literal["a"], None]
reveal_type(t[-2:4]) # revealed: tuple[None, Literal[b"b"]]
reveal_type(t[-3:-1]) # revealed: tuple[Literal["a"], None]
reveal_type(t[-10:10]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1], Literal["a"], None, Literal[b"b"]]
reveal_type(t[0:]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1], Literal["a"], None, Literal[b"b"]]
reveal_type(t[2:]) # revealed: tuple[None, Literal[b"b"]]
reveal_type(t[4:]) # revealed: tuple[()]
reveal_type(t[:0]) # revealed: tuple[()]
reveal_type(t[:2]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1], Literal["a"]]
reveal_type(t[:10]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1], Literal["a"], None, Literal[b"b"]]
reveal_type(t[:]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1], Literal["a"], None, Literal[b"b"]]
reveal_type(t[::-1]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[b"b"], None, Literal["a"], Literal[1]]
reveal_type(t[::2]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1], None]
reveal_type(t[-2:-5:-1]) # revealed: tuple[None, Literal["a"], Literal[1]]
reveal_type(t[::-2]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[b"b"], Literal["a"]]
reveal_type(t[-1::-3]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[b"b"], Literal[1]]
reveal_type(t[None:2:None]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1], Literal["a"]]
reveal_type(t[1:None:1]) # revealed: tuple[Literal["a"], None, Literal[b"b"]]
reveal_type(t[None:None:None]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1], Literal["a"], None, Literal[b"b"]]
start = 1
stop = None
step = 2
reveal_type(t[start:stop:step]) # revealed: tuple[Literal["a"], Literal[b"b"]]
reveal_type(t[False:True]) # revealed: tuple[Literal[1]]
reveal_type(t[True:3]) # revealed: tuple[Literal["a"], None]
t[0:4:0] # error: [zero-stepsize-in-slice]
t[:4:0] # error: [zero-stepsize-in-slice]
t[0::0] # error: [zero-stepsize-in-slice]
t[::0] # error: [zero-stepsize-in-slice]
tuple_slice = t[m:n]
# TODO: Support overloads... Should be `tuple[Literal[1, 'a', b"b"] | None, ...]`
reveal_type(tuple_slice) # revealed: @Todo(return type of overloaded function)
Inheritance
[environment]
python-version = "3.9"
# TODO: `tuple[int, str]` is a valid base (generics)
# error: [invalid-base] "Invalid class base with type `GenericAlias` (all bases must be a class, `Any`, `Unknown` or `Todo`)"
class A(tuple[int, str]): ...
# Runtime value: `(A, tuple, object)`
# TODO: Generics
reveal_type(A.__mro__) # revealed: tuple[Literal[A], Unknown, Literal[object]]
typing.Tuple
Correspondence with tuple
typing.Tuple
can be used interchangeably with tuple
:
from typing import Any, Tuple
class A: ...
def _(c: Tuple, d: Tuple[int, A], e: Tuple[Any, ...]):
reveal_type(c) # revealed: tuple
reveal_type(d) # revealed: tuple[int, A]
reveal_type(e) # revealed: @Todo(full tuple[...] support)
Inheritance
Inheriting from Tuple
results in a MRO with builtins.tuple
and typing.Generic
. Tuple
itself
is not a class.
from typing import Tuple
class C(Tuple): ...
# revealed: tuple[Literal[C], Literal[tuple], Literal[Sequence], Literal[Reversible], Literal[Collection], Literal[Iterable], Literal[Container], @Todo(protocol), Literal[object]]
reveal_type(C.__mro__)