## Summary
This PR attempts to improve `builtin-attribute-shadowing` (`A003`), a
rule which has been repeatedly criticized, but _does_ have value (just
not in the current form).
Historically, this rule would flag cases like:
```python
class Class:
id: int
```
This led to an increasing number of exceptions and special-cases to the
rule over time to try and improve it's specificity (e.g., ignore
`TypedDict`, ignore `@override`).
The crux of the issue is that given the above, referencing `id` will
never resolve to `Class.id`, so the shadowing is actually fine. There's
one exception, however:
```python
class Class:
id: int
def do_thing() -> id:
pass
```
Here, `id` actually resolves to the `id` attribute on the class, not the
`id` builtin.
So this PR completely reworks the rule around this _much_ more targeted
case, which will almost always be a mistake: when you reference a class
member from within the class, and that member shadows a builtin.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/6524.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/7806.
## Summary
Sort of a random PR to make the coupling between `pyproject_config` and
`resolver` more explicit by passing it to the `Resolver`, rather than
threading it through to each individual method.
Saves 2% on Airflow:
```shell
❯ hyperfine --warmup 20 -i "./target/release/main format ../airflow" "./target/release/ruff format ../airflow"
Benchmark 1: ./target/release/main format ../airflow
Time (mean ± σ): 72.7 ms ± 0.4 ms [User: 48.7 ms, System: 75.5 ms]
Range (min … max): 72.0 ms … 73.7 ms 40 runs
Benchmark 2: ./target/release/ruff format ../airflow
Time (mean ± σ): 71.4 ms ± 0.6 ms [User: 46.2 ms, System: 76.2 ms]
Range (min … max): 70.3 ms … 73.8 ms 41 runs
Summary
'./target/release/ruff format ../airflow' ran
1.02 ± 0.01 times faster than './target/release/main format ../airflow'
```
Fixes#8721
## Summary
This implements the rule proposed in #8721, as RUF021. `and` always
binds more tightly than `or` when chaining the two together.
(This should definitely be autofixable, but I'm leaving that to a
followup PR for now.)
## Test Plan
`cargo test` / `cargo insta review`
## Summary
This PR enables Ruff to remove redefined imports, as in:
```python
import os
import os
print(os)
```
Previously, Ruff would flag `F811` on the second `import os`, but
couldn't fix it.
For now, this fix is marked as safe, but only available in preview.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/3477.
## Summary
On `main`, we flag redefinitions in cases like:
```python
import os
x = 1
if x > 0:
import os
```
That is, we consider these to be in the "same branch", since they're not
in disjoint branches. This matches Flake8's behavior, but it seems to
lead to false positives.
## Summary
Given a docstring like:
```python
def func(x: int, args: tuple[int]):
"""Toggle the gizmo.
Args:
x: Some argument.
args: Some other arguments.
"""
```
We were considering the `args:` descriptor to be an indented docstring
section header (since `Args:`) is a valid header name. This led to very
confusing diagnostics.
This PR makes the parsing a bit more lax in this case, such that if we
see a nested header that's more deeply indented than the preceding
header, and the preceding section allows sub-items (like `Args:`), we
avoid treating the nested item as a section header.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9426.
## Summary
After we apply fixes, the source code might be transformed. And yet,
we're using the _unmodified_ source code to compute locations in some
cases (e.g., for displaying parse errors, or Jupyter Notebook cells).
This can lead to subtle errors in reporting, or even panics. This PR
modifies the linter to use the _transformed_ source code for such
computations.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9407.
I just fixed this false negative in flake8-pyi
(https://github.com/PyCQA/flake8-pyi/pull/460), and then realised ruff
has the exact same bug! Luckily it's a very easy fix.
(The bug is that unused protocols go undetected if they're generic.)
## Summary
This is similar to https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/8876, but more
limited in scope:
1. It only applies to `# fmt: skip` (like Black). Like `# isort: on`, `#
fmt: on` needs to be on its own line (still).
2. It only delimits on `#`, so you can do `# fmt: skip # noqa`, but not
`# fmt: skip - some other content` or `# fmt: skip; noqa`.
If we want to support the `;`-delimited version, we should revisit
later, since we don't support that in the linter (so `# fmt: skip; noqa`
wouldn't register a `noqa`).
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/8892.