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	 CI / Determine changes (push) Waiting to run CI / cargo fmt (push) Waiting to run CI / cargo clippy (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / cargo test (linux) (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / cargo test (linux, release) (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / cargo test (windows) (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / cargo test (wasm) (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / cargo build (release) (push) Waiting to run CI / cargo build (msrv) (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / cargo fuzz build (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / fuzz parser (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / test scripts (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / ecosystem (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / Fuzz for new ty panics (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / cargo shear (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / python package (push) Waiting to run CI / pre-commit (push) Waiting to run CI / mkdocs (push) Waiting to run CI / formatter instabilities and black similarity (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / test ruff-lsp (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / check playground (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / benchmarks-instrumented (push) Blocked by required conditions CI / benchmarks-walltime (push) Blocked by required conditions [ty Playground] Release / publish (push) Waiting to run We already had support for homogeneous tuples (`tuple[int, ...]`). This PR extends this to also support mixed tuples (`tuple[str, str, *tuple[int, ...], str str]`). A mixed tuple consists of a fixed-length (possibly empty) prefix and suffix, and a variable-length portion in the middle. Every element of the variable-length portion must be of the same type. A homogeneous tuple is then just a mixed tuple with an empty prefix and suffix. The new data representation uses different Rust types for a fixed-length (aka heterogeneous) tuple. Another option would have been to use the `VariableLengthTuple` representation for all tuples, and to wrap the "variable + suffix" portion in an `Option`. I don't think that would simplify the method implementations much, though, since we would still have a 2×2 case analysis for most of them. One wrinkle is that the definition of the `tuple` class in the typeshed has a single typevar, and canonically represents a homogeneous tuple. When getting the class of a tuple instance, that means that we have to summarize our detailed mixed tuple type information into its "homogeneous supertype". (We were already doing this for heterogeneous types.) A similar thing happens when concatenating two mixed tuples: the variable-length portion and suffix of the LHS, and the prefix and variable-length portion of the RHS, all get unioned into the variable-length portion of the result. The LHS prefix and RHS suffix carry through unchanged. --------- Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com> | ||
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| .. | ||
| booleans.md | ||
| classes.md | ||
| custom.md | ||
| in.md | ||
| instances.md | ||
| integers.md | ||
| tuples.md | ||
| unions.md | ||