Commit Graph

145 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Charlie Marsh
ba0736385d [ty] Add a diagnostic for non-decorator uses of final (#22555)
## Summary

See:
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/22499#discussion_r2687263390.
2026-01-14 09:14:59 -05:00
Charlie Marsh
9a676bbeb7 [ty] Add diagnostic to catch generic enums (#22482)
## Summary

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/2416.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2026-01-13 16:55:46 -05:00
Charlie Marsh
4abc5fe2f1 [ty] Add support for dynamic type() classes (#22291)
## Summary

This PR adds support for dynamic classes created via `type()`. The core
of the change is that `ClassLiteral` is now an enum:

```rust
pub enum ClassLiteral<'db> {
    /// A class defined via a `class` statement.
    Stmt(StmtClassLiteral<'db>),
    /// A class created via the functional form `type(name, bases, dict)`.
    Functional(FunctionalClassLiteral<'db>),
}
```

And, in turn, various methods on `ClassLiteral` like `body_scope` now
return `Option` or similar (and callers must adjust to that change in
signature).

Over time, we can expand the enum to include functional namedtuples,
etc. (I already have this working in a separate branch, and I believe it
slots in well.)

(I'd love help with the names -- I think `StmtClassLiteral` is kind of
lame. Maybe `DeclarativeClassLiteral`?)

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/740.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2026-01-12 15:20:42 -05:00
Micha Reiser
e61657ff3c [ty] Enable unused-type-ignore-comment by default (#22474) 2026-01-09 10:58:43 +00:00
Micha Reiser
93039d055d [ty] Add --add-ignore CLI option (#21696) 2026-01-07 11:17:05 +01:00
Charlie Marsh
8b8b174e4f [ty] Add a diagnostic for @functools.total_ordering without a defined comparison method (#22183)
## Summary

This raises a `ValueError` at runtime:

```python
from functools import total_ordering

@total_ordering
class NoOrdering:
    def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool:
        return True
```

Specifically:

```
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.11/lib/python3.11/functools.py", line 193, in total_ordering
    raise ValueError('must define at least one ordering operation: < > <= >=')
ValueError: must define at least one ordering operation: < > <= >=
```

See: https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1202.
2026-01-06 04:14:06 +00:00
Jack O'Connor
922d964bcb [ty] emit diagnostics for method definitions and other invalid statements in TypedDict class bodies (#22351)
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/2277.
2026-01-05 11:28:04 -08:00
Matthew Mckee
4f2529f353 [ty] Fix typo in cli docs for respect_ignore_files arg (#22308) 2025-12-30 21:38:50 +01:00
Simon Lamon
c032e27566 [ty] Rename non-subscriptable error code to not-subscriptable (#22193) 2025-12-27 11:44:35 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
2de4464e92 [ty] Fix implementation of Top[Callable[..., object]] (#22145)
## Summary

Add a proper representation for the `Callable` top type, and use it to
get `callable()` narrowing right.

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1426.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-12-24 12:49:09 -05:00
Matthew Mckee
5ea30c4c53 Show both ty.toml and pyproject.toml examples in configuration reference (#22144)
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
2025-12-23 09:49:44 +01:00
Micha Reiser
d6a7c9b4ed [ty] Add respect-type-ignore-comments configuration option (#22137) 2025-12-23 08:36:51 +01:00
Micha Reiser
8fc4349fd3 [ty] Split suppression.rs into multiple smaller modules (#22141) 2025-12-22 16:08:56 +01:00
Will Duke
b6e84eca16 [ty] Document invalid-syntax-in-forward-annotation and escape-character-in-forward-annotation (#22130)
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2025-12-21 19:35:44 +00:00
Micha Reiser
b4c2825afd [ty] Move module resolver code into its own crate (#22106) 2025-12-21 11:00:34 +00:00
Micha Reiser
5b475b45aa [ty] Add --force-exclude option (#22076) 2025-12-20 10:03:41 +01:00
Alex Waygood
dde0d0af68 [ty] List rules in alphabetical order in the reference docs (#22097)
## Summary

Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1885.

It wasn't obvious to me that there was a deliberate order to the way
these rules were listed in our reference docs -- it looked like it was
_nearly_ alphabetical, but not quite. I think it's simpler if we just
list them in alphabetical order.

## Test Plan

The output from running `cargo dev generate-all` (committed as part of
this PR) looks correct!
2025-12-19 19:11:05 +00:00
Alex Waygood
2151c3d351 [ty] Document that several rules are disabled by default because of the number of false positives they produce (#22095) 2025-12-19 18:45:18 +00:00
Micha Reiser
30ce679b9a [ty] Fix rules severity URL (#22069) 2025-12-19 07:25:02 +00:00
Aria Desires
2e44a861cb [ty] Disable possibly-missing-imports by default (#22041)
@carljm put forth a reasonably compelling argument that just disabling
this lint might be advisable. If we agree, here's the implementation.

* Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/309

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-12-18 20:06:34 +00:00
Zanie Blue
051f6896ac [ty] Remove extra headings and split examples in the overrides configuration docs (#21994)
Having these as markdown headings ends up being weird in the reference
documentation, e.g., before:

<img width="1071" height="779" alt="Screenshot 2025-12-15 at 8 45 25 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/2118d4f1-f557-46f3-a4b6-56c406cf9aca"
/>
2025-12-16 06:57:06 -06:00
David Peter
5b1d3ac9b9 [ty] Document TY_CONFIG_FILE (#22001) 2025-12-16 13:15:24 +01:00
Zanie Blue
8e13765b57 [ty] Use title for configuration code fences in ty reference documentation (#21992)
Part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/pull/1904
2025-12-15 16:36:08 -05:00
Bhuminjay Soni
04f9949711 [ty] Emit diagnostic when a type variable with a default is followed by one without a default (#21787)
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2025-12-14 19:35:37 +00:00
Leandro Braga
8bc753b842 [ty] Fix callout syntax in configuration mkdocs (#1875) (#21961) 2025-12-14 10:21:54 +01:00
Simon Lamon
a544c59186 [ty] Emit a diagnostic when frozen dataclass inherits a non-frozen dataclass and the other way around (#21962)
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2025-12-13 20:59:26 +00:00
Aria Desires
ca5f099481 [ty] update implicit root docs (#21955)
## Summary

./tests is now no longer an implicit root, per
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/21817
2025-12-12 16:30:23 -05:00
Jack O'Connor
1b44d7e2a7 [ty] add SyntheticTypedDictType and implement normalized and is_equivalent_to (#21784) 2025-12-10 20:36:36 +00:00
Denys Zhak
f4e4229683 Add token based parenthesized_ranges implementation (#21738)
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
2025-12-03 08:15:17 +00:00
Alex Waygood
392a8e4e50 [ty] Improve diagnostics for unsupported comparison operations (#21737) 2025-12-02 19:58:45 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
72304b01eb [ty] Add a diagnostic for prohibited NamedTuple attribute overrides (#21717)
## Summary

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1684.
2025-12-01 21:46:58 -05:00
Charlie Marsh
e7beb7e1f4 [ty] Forbid use of super() in NamedTuple subclasses (#21700)
## Summary

The exact behavior around what's allowed vs. disallowed was partly
detected through trial and error in the runtime.

I was a little confused by [this
comment](https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/129352) that says
"`NamedTuple` subclasses cannot be inherited from" because in practice
that doesn't appear to error at runtime.

Closes [#1683](https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1683).
2025-11-30 15:49:06 +00:00
Alex Waygood
8bcfc198b8 [ty] Implement typing.final for methods (#21646)
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
2025-11-28 15:18:02 +00:00
Alex Waygood
aef2fad0c5 [ty] Add IDE autofixes for two "Did you mean...?" suggestions (#21667) 2025-11-27 18:20:02 +00:00
Alex Waygood
792ec3e96e Improve docs on how to stop Ruff and ty disagreeing with each other (#21644)
## Summary

Lots of Ruff rules encourage you to make changes that might then cause
ty to start complaining about Liskov violations. Most of these Ruff
rules already refrain from complaining about a method if they see that
the method is decorated with `@override`, but this usually isn't
documented. This PR updates the docs of many Ruff rules to note that
they refrain from complaining about `@override`-decorated methods, and
also adds a similar note to the ty `invalid-method-override`
documentation.

Helps with
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1644#issuecomment-3581663859

## Test Plan

- `uvx prek run -a` locally
- CI on this PR
2025-11-27 08:18:21 +00:00
Dhruv Manilawala
c7107a5a90 [ty] Use zip to perform explicit specialization (#21635)
## Summary

This PR updates the explicit specialization logic to avoid using the
call machinery.

Previously, the logic would use the call machinery by converting the
list of type variables into a `Binding` with a single `Signature` where
all the type variables are positional-only parameters with bounds and
constraints as the annotated type and the default type as the default
parameter value. This has the advantage that it doesn't need to
implement any specific logic but the disadvantages are subpar diagnostic
messages as it would use the ones specific to a function call. But, an
important disadvantage is that the kind of type variable is lost in this
translation which becomes important in #21445 where a `ParamSpec` can
specialize into a list of types which is provided using list literal.
For example,

```py
class Foo[T, **P]: ...

Foo[int, [int, str]]
```

This PR converts the logic to use a simple loop using `zip_longest` as
all type variables and their corresponding type argument maps on a 1-1
basis. They cannot be specified using keyword argument either e.g.,
`dict[_VT=str, _KT=int]` is invalid.

This PR also makes an initial attempt to improve the diagnostic message
to specifically target the specialization part by using words like "type
argument" instead of just "argument" and including information like the
type variable, bounds, and constraints. Further improvements can be made
by highlighting the type variable definition or the bounds / constraints
as a sub-diagnostic but I'm going to leave that as a follow-up.

## Test Plan

Update messages in existing test cases.
2025-11-27 03:52:22 +00:00
Shunsuke Shibayama
2c0c5ff4e7 [ty] handle recursive type inference properly (#20566)
## Summary

Derived from #17371

Fixes astral-sh/ty#256
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1415
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1433
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1524

Properly handles any kind of recursive inference and prevents panics.

---

Let me explain techniques for converging fixed-point iterations during
recursive type inference.
There are two types of type inference that naively don't converge
(causing salsa to panic): divergent type inference and oscillating type
inference.

### Divergent type inference

Divergent type inference occurs when eagerly expanding a recursive type.
A typical example is this:

```python
class C:
    def f(self, other: "C"):
        self.x = (other.x, 1)

reveal_type(C().x) # revealed: Unknown | tuple[Unknown | tuple[Unknown | tuple[..., Literal[1]], Literal[1]], Literal[1]]
```

To solve this problem, we have already introduced `Divergent` types
(https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/20312). `Divergent` types are
treated as a kind of dynamic type [^1].

```python
Unknown | tuple[Unknown | tuple[Unknown | tuple[..., Literal[1]], Literal[1]], Literal[1]]
=> Unknown | tuple[Divergent, Literal[1]]
```

When a query function that returns a type enters a cycle, it sets
`Divergent` as the cycle initial value (instead of `Never`). Then, in
the cycle recovery function, it reduces the nesting of types containing
`Divergent` to converge.

```python
0th: Divergent
1st: Unknown | tuple[Divergent, Literal[1]]
2nd: Unknown | tuple[Unknown | tuple[Divergent, Literal[1]], Literal[1]]
=> Unknown | tuple[Divergent, Literal[1]]
```

Each cycle recovery function for each query should operate only on the
`Divergent` type originating from that query.
For this reason, while `Divergent` appears the same as `Any` to the
user, it internally carries some information: the location where the
cycle occurred. Previously, we roughly identified this by having the
scope where the cycle occurred, but with the update to salsa, functions
that create cycle initial values ​​can now receive a `salsa::Id`
(https://github.com/salsa-rs/salsa/pull/1012). This is an opaque ID that
uniquely identifies the cycle head (the query that is the starting point
for the fixed-point iteration). `Divergent` now has this `salsa::Id`.

### Oscillating type inference

Now, another thing to consider is oscillating type inference.
Oscillating type inference arises from the fact that monotonicity is
broken. Monotonicity here means that for a query function, if it enters
a cycle, the calculation must start from a "bottom value" and progress
towards the final result with each cycle. Monotonicity breaks down in
type systems that have features like overloading and overriding.

```python
class Base:
    def flip(self) -> "Sub":
        return Sub()

class Sub(Base):
    def flip(self) -> "Base":
        return Base()

class C:
    def __init__(self, x: Sub):
        self.x = x

    def replace_with(self, other: "C"):
        self.x = other.x.flip()

reveal_type(C(Sub()).x)
```

Naive fixed-point iteration results in `Divergent -> Sub -> Base -> Sub
-> ...`, which oscillates forever without diverging or converging. To
address this, the salsa API has been modified so that the cycle recovery
function receives the value of the previous cycle
(https://github.com/salsa-rs/salsa/pull/1012).
The cycle recovery function returns the union type of the current cycle
and the previous cycle. In the above example, the result type for each
cycle is `Divergent -> Sub -> Base (= Sub | Base) -> Base`, which
converges.

The final result of oscillating type inference does not contain
`Divergent` because `Divergent` that appears in a union type can be
removed, as is clear from the expansion. This simplification is
performed at the same time as nesting reduction.

```
T | Divergent = T | (T | (T | ...)) = T
```

[^1]: In theory, it may be possible to strictly treat types containing
`Divergent` types as recursive types, but we probably shouldn't go that
deep yet. (AFAIK, there are no PEPs that specify how to handle
implicitly recursive types that aren't named by type aliases)

## Performance analysis

A happy side effect of this PR is that we've observed widespread
performance improvements!
This is likely due to the removal of the `ITERATIONS_BEFORE_FALLBACK`
and max-specialization depth trick
(https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1433,
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1415), which means we reach a
fixed point much sooner.

## Ecosystem analysis

The changes look good overall.
You may notice changes in the converged values ​​for recursive types,
this is because the way recursive types are normalized has been changed.
Previously, types containing `Divergent` types were normalized by
replacing them with the `Divergent` type itself, but in this PR, types
with a nesting level of 2 or more that contain `Divergent` types are
normalized by replacing them with a type with a nesting level of 1. This
means that information about the non-divergent parts of recursive types
is no longer lost.

```python
# previous
tuple[tuple[Divergent, int], int] => Divergent
# now
tuple[tuple[Divergent, int], int] => tuple[Divergent, int]
```

The false positive error introduced in this PR occurs in class
definitions with self-referential base classes, such as the one below.

```python
from typing_extensions import Generic, TypeVar

T = TypeVar("T")
U = TypeVar("U")

class Base2(Generic[T, U]): ...

# TODO: no error
# error: [unsupported-base] "Unsupported class base with type `<class 'Base2[Sub2, U@Sub2]'> | <class 'Base2[Sub2[Unknown], U@Sub2]'>`"
class Sub2(Base2["Sub2", U]): ...
```

This is due to the lack of support for unions of MROs, or because cyclic
legacy generic types are not inferred as generic types early in the
query cycle.

## Test Plan

All samples listed in astral-sh/ty#256 are tested and passed without any
panic!

## Acknowledgments

Thanks to @MichaReiser for working on bug fixes and improvements to
salsa for this PR. @carljm also contributed early on to the discussion
of the query convergence mechanism proposed in this PR.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-11-26 08:50:26 -08:00
Alex Waygood
81c97e9e94 [ty] Implement typing.override (#21627)
## Summary

Part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/155. This implements the
basic check (`@override`-decorated methods should override things!), but
not the strict check specified in
https://typing.python.org/en/latest/spec/class-compat.html#strict-enforcement-per-project,
which should be a separate error code.

## Test Plan

mdtests and snapshots

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-11-25 10:42:40 -08:00
Micha Reiser
15cb41c1f9 [ty] Add 'remove unused ignore comment' code action (#21582)
## Summary

This PR adds a code action to remove unused ignore comments.

This PR also includes some infrastructure boilerplate to set up code
actions in the editor:

* Extend `snapshot-diagnostics` to render fixes
* Render fixes when using `--output-format=full`
* Hook up edits and the code action request in the LSP
* Add the `Unnecessary` tag to `unused-ignore-comment` diagnostics
* Group multiple unused codes into a single diagnostic

The same fix can be used on the CLI once we add `ty fix` 

Note: `unused-ignore-comment` is currently disabled by default.


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f9e21087-3513-4156-85d7-a90b1a7a3489
2025-11-25 08:08:21 -05:00
Micha Reiser
eddb9ad38d [ty] Refactor CheckSuppressionContext to use DiagnosticGuard (#21587) 2025-11-25 10:54:42 +00:00
Alex Waygood
adf095e889 [ty] Extend Liskov checks to also cover classmethods and staticmethods (#21598)
## Summary

Building on https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/21436.

There's nothing conceptually more complicated about this, it just
requires its own set of tests and its own subdiagnostic hint.

I also uncovered another inconsistency between mypy/pyright/pyrefly,
which is fun. In this case, I suggest we go with pyright's behaviour.

## Test Plan

mdtests/snapshots
2025-11-24 23:14:06 +00:00
Alex Waygood
e642874cf1 [ty] Check method definitions on subclasses for Liskov violations (#21436) 2025-11-23 18:08:15 +00:00
Alex Waygood
8dad289062 [ty] Add Salsa caching to ClassLiteral::fields (#21512) 2025-11-18 17:48:36 +00:00
David Peter
5ca9c15fc8 [ty] Better invalid-assignment diagnostics (#21476)
## Summary

Improve the diagnostic range for `invalid-assignment` diagnostics, and
add source annotations for the value and target type.

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1556

### Before

<img width="836" height="601" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/a48219bb-58a8-4a83-b290-d09ef50ce5f0"
/>

### After

<img width="857" height="742" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/cfcaa4f4-94fb-459e-8d64-97050dfecb50"
/>

## Ecosystem impact

Very good! Due to the wider diagnostic range, we now pick up more `#
type: ignore` directives that were supposed to suppress an invalid
assignment diagnostic.

## Test Plan

New snapshot tests
2025-11-18 14:31:04 +01:00
Jack O'Connor
5f3e086ee4 [ty] implement typing.NewType by adding Type::NewTypeInstance 2025-11-10 14:55:47 -08:00
Dhruv Manilawala
cb2e277482 [ty] Understand legacy and PEP 695 ParamSpec (#21139)
## Summary

This PR adds support for understanding the legacy definition and PEP 695
definition for `ParamSpec`.

This is still very initial and doesn't really implement any of the
semantics.

Part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/157

## Test Plan

Add mdtest cases.

## Ecosystem analysis

Most of the diagnostics in `starlette` are due to the fact that ty now
understands `ParamSpec` is not a `Todo` type, so the assignability check
fails. The code looks something like:

```py
class _MiddlewareFactory(Protocol[P]):
    def __call__(self, app: ASGIApp, /, *args: P.args, **kwargs: P.kwargs) -> ASGIApp: ...  # pragma: no cover

class Middleware:
    def __init__(
        self,
        cls: _MiddlewareFactory[P],
        *args: P.args,
        **kwargs: P.kwargs,
    ) -> None:
        self.cls = cls
        self.args = args
        self.kwargs = kwargs

# ty complains that `ServerErrorMiddleware` is not assignable to `_MiddlewareFactory[P]`
Middleware(ServerErrorMiddleware, handler=error_handler, debug=debug)
```

There are multiple diagnostics where there's an attribute access on the
`Wrapped` object of `functools` which Pyright also raises:
```py
from functools import wraps

def my_decorator(f):
    @wraps(f)
    def wrapper(*args, **kwds):
        return f(*args, **kwds)

	# Pyright: Cannot access attribute "__signature__" for class "_Wrapped[..., Unknown, ..., Unknown]"
      Attribute "__signature__" is unknown [reportAttributeAccessIssue]
	# ty: Object of type `_Wrapped[Unknown, Unknown, Unknown, Unknown]` has no attribute `__signature__` [unresolved-attribute]
    wrapper.__signature__
    return wrapper
```

There are additional diagnostics that is due to the assignability checks
failing because ty now infers the `ParamSpec` instead of using the
`Todo` type which would always succeed. This results in a few
`no-matching-overload` diagnostics because the assignability checks
fail.

There are a few diagnostics related to
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/491 where there's a variable
which is either a bound method or a variable that's annotated with
`Callable` that doesn't contain the instance as the first parameter.

Another set of (valid) diagnostics are where the code hasn't provided
all the type variables. ty is now raising diagnostics for these because
we include `ParamSpec` type variable in the signature. For example,
`staticmethod[Any]` which contains two type variables.
2025-11-06 11:14:40 -05:00
Carl Meyer
3179b05221 [ty] don't assume in diagnostic messages that a TypedDict key error is about subscript access (#21166)
## Summary

Before this PR, we would emit diagnostics like "Invalid key access" for
a TypedDict literal with invalid key, which doesn't make sense since
there's no "access" in that case. This PR just adjusts the wording to be
more general, and adjusts the documentation of the lint rule too.

I noticed this in the playground and thought it would be a quick fix. As
usual, it turned out to be a bit more subtle than I expected, but for
now I chose to punt on the complexity. We may ultimately want to have
different rules for invalid subscript vs invalid TypedDict literal,
because an invalid key in a TypedDict literal is low severity: it's a
typo detector, but not actually a type error. But then there's another
wrinkle there: if the TypedDict is `closed=True`, then it _is_ a type
error. So would we want to separate the open and closed cases into
separate rules, too? I decided to leave this as a question for future.

If we wanted to use separate rules, or use specific wording for each
case instead of the generalized wording I chose here, that would also
involve a bit of extra work to distinguish the cases, since we use a
generic set of functions for reporting these errors.

## Test Plan

Added and updated mdtests.
2025-10-31 10:49:59 -04:00
Micha Reiser
eb8c0ad87c [ty] Add --no-progress option (#21063) 2025-10-24 18:00:00 +02:00
Micha Reiser
7532155c9b [ty] Add suggestion to unknown rule diagnostics, rename unknown-rule lint to ignore-comment-unknown-rule (#20948) 2025-10-18 12:44:21 +02:00
Aria Desires
7155a62e5c [ty] Add version hint for failed stdlib attribute accesses (#20909)
This is the ultra-minimal implementation of

* https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/296

that was previously discussed as a good starting point. In particular we
don't actually bother trying to figure out the exact python versions,
but we still mention "hey btw for No Reason At All... you're on python
3.10" when you try to access something that has a definition rooted in
the stdlib that we believe exists sometimes.
2025-10-16 14:07:33 +00:00