## Summary
We currently perform a subtyping check, similar to what we were doing
for `@final` instances before
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/21167, which is incorrect, e.g.
we currently consider `type[X[Any]]` and `type[X[T]]]` disjoint (where
`X` is `@final`).
This fixes the logic error that @sharkdp
[found](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/21871#discussion_r2605755588)
in the constraint set upper bound normalization logic I introduced in
#21871.
I had originally claimed that `(T ≤ α & ~β)` should simplify into `(T ≤
α) ∧ ¬(T ≤ β)`. But that also suggests that `T ≤ ~β` should simplify to
`¬(T ≤ β)` on its own, and that's not correct.
The correct simplification is that `~α` is an "atomic" type, not an
"intersection" for the purposes of our upper bound simplifcation. So `(T
≤ α & ~β)` should simplify to `(T ≤ α) ∧ (T ≤ ~β)`. That is, break apart
the elements of a (proper) intersection, regardless of whether each
element is negated or not.
This PR fixes the logic, adds a test case, and updates the comments to
be hopefully more clear and accurate.
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1832, fixes
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1513
## Summary
A class object `C` (for which we infer an unspecialized `ClassLiteral`
type) should always be assignable to the type `type[C]` (which is
default-specialized, if `C` is generic). We already implemented this for
most cases, but we missed the case of a generic final type, where we
simplify `type[C]` to the `GenericAlias` type for the default
specialization of `C`. So we also need to implement this assignability
of generic `ClassLiteral` types as-if default-specialized.
## Test Plan
Added mdtests that failed before this PR.
---------
Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
## Summary
Respect typevar bounds and constraints when matching against a union.
For example:
```py
def accepts_t_or_int[T_str: str](x: T_str | int) -> T_str:
raise NotImplementedError
reveal_type(accepts_t_or_int("a")) # ok, reveals `Literal["a"]`
reveal_type(accepts_t_or_int(1)) # ok, reveals `Unknown`
class Unrelated: ...
# error: [invalid-argument-type] "Argument type `Unrelated` does not
# satisfy upper bound `str` of type variable `T_str`"
accepts_t_or_int(Unrelated())
```
Previously, the last call succeed without any errors. Worse than that,
we also incorrectly solved `T_str = Unrelated`, which often lead to
downstream errors.
closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1837
## Ecosystem impact
Looks good!
* Lots of removed false positives, often because we previously selected
a wrong overload for a generic function (because we didn't respect the
typevar bound in an earlier overload).
* We now understand calls to functions accepting an argument of type
`GenericPath: TypeAlias = AnyStr | PathLike[AnyStr]`. Previously, we
would incorrectly match a `Path` argument against the `AnyStr` typevar
(violating its constraints), but now we match against `PathLike`.
## Performance
Another regression on `colour`. This package uses `numpy` heavily. And
`numpy` is the codebase that originally lead me to this bug. The fix
here allows us to infer more precise `np.array` types in some cases, so
it's reasonable that we just need to perform more work.
The fix here also requires us to look at more union elements when we
would previously short-circuit incorrectly, so some more work needs to
be done in the solver.
## Test Plan
New Markdown tests
In a constraint set, it's not useful for an upper bound to be an
intersection type, or for a lower bound to be a union type. Both of
those can be rewritten as simpler BDDs:
```
T ≤ α & β ⇒ (T ≤ α) ∧ (T ≤ β)
T ≤ α & ¬β ⇒ (T ≤ α) ∧ ¬(T ≤ β)
α | β ≤ T ⇒ (α ≤ T) ∧ (β ≤ T)
```
We were seeing performance issues on #21551 when _not_ performing this
simplification. For instance, `pandas` was producing some constraint
sets involving intersections of 8-9 different types. Our sequent map
calculation was timing out calculating all of the different permutations
of those types:
```
t1 & t2 & t3 → t1
t1 & t2 & t3 → t2
t1 & t2 & t3 → t3
t1 & t2 & t3 → t1 & t2
t1 & t2 & t3 → t1 & t3
t1 & t2 & t3 → t2 & t3
```
(and then imagine what that looks like for 9 types instead of 3...)
With this change, all of those permutations are now encoded in the BDD
structure itself, which is very good at simplifying that kind of thing.
Pulling this out of #21551 for separate review.
#21744 fixed some non-determinism in our constraint set implementation
by switching our BDD representation from being "fully reduced" to being
"quasi-reduced". We still deduplicate identical nodes (via salsa
interning), but we removed the logic to prune redundant nodes (one with
identical outgoing true and false edges). This ensures that the BDD
"remembers" all of the individual constraints that it was created with.
However, that comes at the cost of creating larger BDDs, and on #21551
that was causing performance issues. `scikit-learn` was producing a
function signature with dozens of overloads, and we were trying to
create a constraint set that would map a return type typevar to any of
those overload's return types. This created a combinatorial explosion in
the BDD, with by far most of the BDD paths leading to the `never`
terminal.
This change updates the quasi-reduction logic to prune nodes that are
redundant _because both edges lead to the `never` terminal_. In this
case, we don't need to "remember" that constraint, since no assignment
to it can lead to a valid specialization. So we keep the "memory" of our
quasi-reduced structure, while still pruning large unneeded portions of
the BDD structure.
Pulling this out of https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/21551 for
separate review.
## Summary
This PR adds special handling for `asynccontextmanager` calls as a
temporary solution for https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1804. We
will be able to remove this soon once we have support for generic
protocols in the solver.
closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1804
## Ecosystem
```diff
+ tests/test_downloadermiddleware.py:305:56: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument to bound method `download` is incorrect: Expected `Spider`, found `Unknown | Spider | None`
+ tests/test_downloadermiddleware.py:305:56: warning[possibly-missing-attribute] Attribute `spider` may be missing on object of type `Crawler | None`
```
These look like true positives
```diff
+ pymongo/asynchronous/database.py:1021:35: error[invalid-assignment] Object of type `(AsyncClientSession & ~AlwaysTruthy & ~AlwaysFalsy) | (_ServerMode & ~AlwaysFalsy) | Unknown | Primary` is not assignable to `_ServerMode | None`
+ pymongo/asynchronous/database.py:1025:17: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument to bound method `_conn_for_reads` is incorrect: Expected `_ServerMode`, found `_ServerMode | None`
```
Known problems or true positives, just caused by the new type for
`session`
```diff
- src/integrations/prefect-sqlalchemy/prefect_sqlalchemy/database.py:269:16: error[invalid-return-type] Return type does not match returned value: expected `Connection | AsyncConnection`, found `_GeneratorContextManager[Unknown, None, None] | _AsyncGeneratorContextManager[Unknown, None] | Connection | AsyncConnection`
+ src/integrations/prefect-sqlalchemy/prefect_sqlalchemy/database.py:269:16: error[invalid-return-type] Return type does not match returned value: expected `Connection | AsyncConnection`, found `_GeneratorContextManager[Unknown, None, None] | _AsyncGeneratorContextManager[AsyncConnection, None] | Connection | AsyncConnection`
```
Just a more concrete type
```diff
- src/prefect/flow_engine.py:1277:24: error[missing-argument] No argument provided for required parameter `cls`
- src/prefect/server/api/server.py:696:49: error[missing-argument] No argument provided for required parameter `cls`
- src/prefect/task_engine.py:1426:24: error[missing-argument] No argument provided for required parameter `cls`
```
Good
## Test Plan
* Adapted and newly added Markdown tests
* Tested on internal codebase
## Summary
This fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1736 where recursive
generic protocols with growing specializations caused a stack overflow.
The issue occurred with protocols like:
```python
class C[T](Protocol):
a: 'C[set[T]]'
```
When checking `C[set[int]]` against e.g. `C[Unknown]`, member `a`
requires checking `C[set[set[int]]]`, which requires
`C[set[set[set[int]]]]`, etc. Each level has different type
specializations, so the existing cycle detection (using full types as
cache keys) didn't catch the infinite recursion.
This fix adds a simple recursion depth limit (64) to the CycleDetector.
When the depth exceeds the limit, we return the fallback value (assume
compatible) to safely terminate the recursion.
This is a bit of a blunt hammer, but it should be broadly effective to
prevent stack overflow in any nested-relation case, and it's hard to
imagine that non-recursive nested relation comparisons of depth > 64
exist much in the wild.
## Test Plan
Added mdtest.
## Summary
This PR allows our generics solver to find a solution for `T` in cases
like the following:
```py
def extract_t[T](x: P[T] | Q[T]) -> T:
raise NotImplementedError
reveal_type(extract_t(P[int]())) # revealed: int
reveal_type(extract_t(Q[str]())) # revealed: str
```
closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1772
closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1314
## Ecosystem
The impact here looks very good!
It took me a long time to figure this out, but the new diagnostics on
bokeh are actually true positives. I should have tested with another
type-checker immediately, I guess. All other type checkers also emit
errors on these `__init__` calls. MRE
[here](https://play.ty.dev/5c19d260-65e2-4f70-a75e-1a25780843a2) (no
error on main, diagnostic on this branch)
A lot of false positives on home-assistant go away for calls to
functions like
[`async_listen`](180053fe98/homeassistant/core.py (L1581-L1587))
which take a `event_type: EventType[_DataT] | str` parameter. We can now
solve for `_DataT` here, which was previously falling back to its
default value, and then caused problems because it was used as an
argument to an invariant generic class.
## Test Plan
New Markdown tests
## Summary
fixes: https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1809
I took this chance to add some debug level tracing logs for overload
call evaluation similar to Doug's implementation in `constraints.rs`.
## Test Plan
- Add new mdtests
- Tested it against `sqlalchemy.select` in pyx which results in the
correct overload being matched
This adds autocomplete suggestions for function arguments. For example,
`okay` in:
```python
def foo(okay=None):
foo(o<CURSOR>
```
This also ensures that we don't suggest a keyword argument if it has
already been used.
Closesastral-sh/issues#1550
## Summary
If you pass a non-tuple to `Annotated`, we end up running inference on
it twice. I _think_ the only case here is `Annotated[]`, where we insert
a (fake) empty `Name` node in the slice.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1801.
## Summary
Increase our SQLAlchemy test coverage to make sure we understand
`Session.scalar`, `Session.scalars`, `Session.execute` (and their async
equivalents), as well as `Result.tuples`, `Result.one_or_none`,
`Row._tuple`.
## Summary
This PR adds the possibility to write mdtests that specify external
dependencies in a `project` section of TOML blocks. For example, here is
a test that makes sure that we understand Pydantic's dataclass-transform
setup:
````markdown
```toml
[environment]
python-version = "3.12"
python-platform = "linux"
[project]
dependencies = ["pydantic==2.12.2"]
```
```py
from pydantic import BaseModel
class User(BaseModel):
id: int
name: str
user = User(id=1, name="Alice")
reveal_type(user.id) # revealed: int
reveal_type(user.name) # revealed: str
# error: [missing-argument] "No argument provided for required parameter
`name`"
invalid_user = User(id=2)
```
````
## How?
Using the `python-version` and the `dependencies` fields from the
Markdown section, we generate a `pyproject.toml` file, write it to a
temporary directory, and use `uv sync` to install the dependencies into
a virtual environment. We then copy the Python source files from that
venv's `site-packages` folder to a corresponding directory structure in
the in-memory filesystem. Finally, we configure the search paths
accordingly, and run the mdtest as usual.
I fully understand that there are valid concerns here:
* Doesn't this require network access? (yes, it does)
* Is this fast enough? (`uv` caching makes this almost unnoticeable,
actually)
* Is this deterministic? ~~(probably not, package resolution can depend
on the platform you're on)~~ (yes, hopefully)
For this reason, this first version is opt-in, locally. ~~We don't even
run these tests in CI (even though they worked fine in a previous
iteration of this PR).~~ You need to set `MDTEST_EXTERNAL=1`, or use the
new `-e/--enable-external` command line option of the `mdtest.py`
runner. For example:
```bash
# Skip mdtests with external dependencies (default):
uv run crates/ty_python_semantic/mdtest.py
# Run all mdtests, including those with external dependencies:
uv run crates/ty_python_semantic/mdtest.py -e
# Only run the `pydantic` tests. Use `-e` to make sure it is not skipped:
uv run crates/ty_python_semantic/mdtest.py -e pydantic
```
## Why?
I believe that this can be a useful addition to our testing strategy,
which lies somewhere between ecosystem tests and normal mdtests.
Ecosystem tests cover much more code, but they have the disadvantage
that we only see second- or third-order effects via diagnostic diffs. If
we unexpectedly gain or lose type coverage somewhere, we might not even
notice (assuming the gradual guarantee holds, and ecosystem code is
mostly correct). Another disadvantage of ecosystem checks is that they
only test checked-in code that is usually correct. However, we also want
to test what happens on wrong code, like the code that is momentarily
written in an editor, before fixing it. On the other end of the spectrum
we have normal mdtests, which have the disadvantage that they do not
reflect the reality of complex real-world code. We experience this
whenever we're surprised by an ecosystem report on a PR.
That said, these tests should not be seen as a replacement for either of
these things. For example, we should still strive to write detailed
self-contained mdtests for user-reported issues. But we might use this
new layer for regression tests, or simply as a debugging tool. It can
also serve as a tool to document our support for popular third-party
libraries.
## Test Plan
* I've been locally using this for a couple of weeks now.
* `uv run crates/ty_python_semantic/mdtest.py -e`
## Summary
As-is, a single-element tuple gets destructured via:
```rust
let arguments = if let ast::Expr::Tuple(tuple) = slice {
&*tuple.elts
} else {
std::slice::from_ref(slice)
};
```
But then, because it's a single element, we call
`infer_annotation_expression_impl`, passing in the tuple, rather than
the first element.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1793.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1768.
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
## Summary
Closes: https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/157
This PR adds support for the following capabilities involving a
`ParamSpec` type variable:
- Representing `P.args` and `P.kwargs` in the type system
- Matching against a callable containing `P` to create a type mapping
- Specializing `P` against the stored parameters
The value of a `ParamSpec` type variable is being represented using
`CallableType` with a `CallableTypeKind::ParamSpecValue` variant. This
`CallableTypeKind` is expanded from the existing `is_function_like`
boolean flag. An `enum` is used as these variants are mutually
exclusive.
For context, an initial iteration made an attempt to expand the
`Specialization` to use `TypeOrParameters` enum that represents that a
type variable can specialize into either a `Type` or `Parameters` but
that increased the complexity of the code as all downstream usages would
need to handle both the variants appropriately. Additionally, we'd have
also need to establish an invariant that a regular type variable always
maps to a `Type` while a paramspec type variable always maps to a
`Parameters`.
I've intentionally left out checking and raising diagnostics when the
`ParamSpec` type variable and it's components are not being used
correctly to avoid scope increase and it can easily be done as a
follow-up. This would also include the scoping rules which I don't think
a regular type variable implements either.
## Test Plan
Add new mdtest cases and update existing test cases.
Ran this branch on pyx, no new diagnostics.
### Ecosystem analysis
There's a case where in an annotated assignment like:
```py
type CustomType[P] = Callable[...]
def value[**P](...): ...
def another[**P](...):
target: CustomType[P] = value
```
The type of `value` is a callable and it has a paramspec that's bound to
`value`, `CustomType` is a type alias that's a callable and `P` that's
used in it's specialization is bound to `another`. Now, ty infers the
type of `target` same as `value` and does not use the declared type
`CustomType[P]`. [This is the
assignment](0980b9d9ab/src/async_utils/gen_transform.py (L108))
that I'm referring to which then leads to error in downstream usage.
Pyright and mypy does seem to use the declared type.
There are multiple diagnostics in `dd-trace-py` that requires support
for `cls`.
I'm seeing `Divergent` type for an example like which ~~I'm not sure
why, I'll look into it tomorrow~~ is because of a cycle as mentioned in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1729#issuecomment-3612279974:
```py
from typing import Callable
def decorator[**P](c: Callable[P, int]) -> Callable[P, str]: ...
@decorator
def func(a: int) -> int: ...
# ((a: int) -> str) | ((a: Divergent) -> str)
reveal_type(func)
```
I ~~need to look into why are the parameters not being specialized
through multiple decorators in the following code~~ think this is also
because of the cycle mentioned in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1729#issuecomment-3612279974 and
the fact that we don't support `staticmethod` properly:
```py
from contextlib import contextmanager
class Foo:
@staticmethod
@contextmanager
def method(x: int):
yield
foo = Foo()
# ty: Revealed type: `() -> _GeneratorContextManager[Unknown, None, None]` [revealed-type]
reveal_type(foo.method)
```
There's some issue related to `Protocol` that are generic over a
`ParamSpec` in `starlette` which might be related to
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1635 but I'm not sure. Here's a
minimal example to reproduce:
<details><summary>Code snippet:</summary>
<p>
```py
from collections.abc import Awaitable, Callable, MutableMapping
from typing import Any, Callable, ParamSpec, Protocol
P = ParamSpec("P")
Scope = MutableMapping[str, Any]
Message = MutableMapping[str, Any]
Receive = Callable[[], Awaitable[Message]]
Send = Callable[[Message], Awaitable[None]]
ASGIApp = Callable[[Scope, Receive, Send], Awaitable[None]]
_Scope = Any
_Receive = Callable[[], Awaitable[Any]]
_Send = Callable[[Any], Awaitable[None]]
# Since `starlette.types.ASGIApp` type differs from `ASGIApplication` from `asgiref`
# we need to define a more permissive version of ASGIApp that doesn't cause type errors.
_ASGIApp = Callable[[_Scope, _Receive, _Send], Awaitable[None]]
class _MiddlewareFactory(Protocol[P]):
def __call__(
self, app: _ASGIApp, *args: P.args, **kwargs: P.kwargs
) -> _ASGIApp: ...
class Middleware:
def __init__(
self, factory: _MiddlewareFactory[P], *args: P.args, **kwargs: P.kwargs
) -> None:
self.factory = factory
self.args = args
self.kwargs = kwargs
class ServerErrorMiddleware:
def __init__(
self,
app: ASGIApp,
value: int | None = None,
flag: bool = False,
) -> None:
self.app = app
self.value = value
self.flag = flag
async def __call__(self, scope: Scope, receive: Receive, send: Send) -> None: ...
# ty: Argument to bound method `__init__` is incorrect: Expected `_MiddlewareFactory[(...)]`, found `<class 'ServerErrorMiddleware'>` [invalid-argument-type]
Middleware(ServerErrorMiddleware, value=500, flag=True)
```
</p>
</details>
### Conformance analysis
> ```diff
> -constructors_callable.py:36:13: info[revealed-type] Revealed type:
`(...) -> Unknown`
> +constructors_callable.py:36:13: info[revealed-type] Revealed type:
`(x: int) -> Unknown`
> ```
Requires return type inference i.e.,
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/21551
> ```diff
> +constructors_callable.py:194:16: error[invalid-argument-type]
Argument is incorrect: Expected `list[T@__init__]`, found `list[Unknown
| str]`
> +constructors_callable.py:194:22: error[invalid-argument-type]
Argument is incorrect: Expected `list[T@__init__]`, found `list[Unknown
| str]`
> +constructors_callable.py:195:4: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument
is incorrect: Expected `list[T@__init__]`, found `list[Unknown | int]`
> +constructors_callable.py:195:9: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument
is incorrect: Expected `list[T@__init__]`, found `list[Unknown | str]`
> ```
I might need to look into why this is happening...
> ```diff
> +generics_defaults.py:79:1: error[type-assertion-failure] Type
`type[Class_ParamSpec[(str, int, /)]]` does not match asserted type
`<class 'Class_ParamSpec'>`
> ```
which is on the following code
```py
DefaultP = ParamSpec("DefaultP", default=[str, int])
class Class_ParamSpec(Generic[DefaultP]): ...
assert_type(Class_ParamSpec, type[Class_ParamSpec[str, int]])
```
It's occurring because there's no equivalence relationship defined
between `ClassLiteral` and `KnownInstanceType::TypeGenericAlias` which
is what these types are.
Everything else looks good to me!
When converting a class (whether specialized or not) into a `Callable`
type, we should carry through any generic context that the constructor
has. This includes both the generic context of the class itself (if it's
generic) and of the constructor methods (if they are separately
generic).
To help test this, this also updates the `generic_context` extension
function to work on `Callable` types and unions; and adds a new
`into_callable` extension function that works just like
`CallableTypeOf`, but on value forms instead of type forms.
Pulled this out of #21551 for separate review.
## Summary
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/957
As explained in https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/957, literal
union types for recursively defined values can be widened early to
speed up the convergence of fixed-point iterations.
This PR achieves this by embedding a marker in `UnionType` that
distinguishes whether a value is recursively defined.
This also allows us to identify values that are not recursively
defined, so I've increased the limit on the number of elements in a
literal union type for such values.
Edit: while this PR doesn't provide the significant performance
improvement initially hoped for, it does have the benefit of allowing
the number of elements in a literal union to be raised above the salsa
limit, and indeed mypy_primer results revealed that a literal union of
220 elements was actually being used.
## Test Plan
`call/union.md` has been updated
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1587
## Summary
Perform cycle normalization on typevar bounds and constraints (similar
to how it was already done for typevar defaults) in order to ensure
convergence in cyclic cases.
There might be another fix here that could avoid the cycle in many more
cases, where we don't eagerly evaluate typevar bounds/constraints on
explicit specialization, but just accept the given specialization and
later evaluate to see whether we need to emit a diagnostic on it. But
the current fix here is sufficient to solve the problem and matches the
patterns we use to ensure cycle convergence elsewhere, so it seems good
for now; left a TODO for the other idea.
This fix is sufficient to make us not panic, but not sufficient to get
the semantics fully correct; see the TODOs in the tests. I have ideas
for fixing that as well, but it seems worth at least getting this in to
fix the panic.
## Test Plan
Test that previously panicked now does not.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
This applies recursively. So if *any* component of a module name starts
with a `_`, then symbols from that module are excluded from auto-import.
The exception is when it's a module within first party code. Then we
want to include it in auto-import.
## Summary
I have no idea what I'm doing with the fix (all the interesting stuff is
in the second commit).
The basic problem is the compiler emits the diagnostic:
```
x: "foobar"
^^^^^^
```
Which the suppression code-action hands the end of to `Tokens::after`
which then panics because that function panics if handed an offset that
is in the middle of a token.
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1748
## Test Plan
Many tests added (only the e2e test matters).
## Summary
This makes an importing file a required argument to module resolution,
and if the fast-path cached query fails to resolve the module, take the
slow-path uncached (could be cached if we want)
`desperately_resolve_module` which will walk up from the importing file
until it finds a `pyproject.toml` (arbitrary decision, we could try
every ancestor directory), at which point it takes one last desperate
attempt to use that directory as a search-path. We do not continue
walking up once we've found a `pyproject.toml` (arbitrary decision, we
could keep going up).
Running locally, this fixes every broken-for-workspace-reasons import in
pyx's workspace!
* Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1539
* Improves https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/839
## Test Plan
The workspace tests see a huge improvement on most absolute imports.
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1716.
## Test plan
I added a corpus snippet that causes us to panic on `main` (I tested by
running `cargo run -p ty_python_semantic --test=corpus` without the fix
applied).
## Summary
Star-imports can not just affect the state of symbols that they pull in,
they can also affect the state of members that are associated with those
symbols. For example, if `obj.attr` was previously narrowed from `int |
None` to `int`, and a star-import now overwrites `obj`, then the
narrowing on `obj.attr` should be "reset".
This PR keeps track of the state of associated members during star
imports and properly models the flow of their corresponding state
through the control flow structure that we artificially create for
star-imports.
See [this
comment](https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1355#issuecomment-3607125005)
for an explanation why this caused ty to see certain `asyncio` symbols
as not being accessible on Python 3.14.
closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1355
## Ecosystem impact
```diff
async-utils (https://github.com/mikeshardmind/async-utils)
- src/async_utils/bg_loop.py:115:31: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument to bound method `set_task_factory` is incorrect: Expected `_TaskFactory | None`, found `def eager_task_factory[_T_co](loop: AbstractEventLoop | None, coro: Coroutine[Any, Any, _T_co@eager_task_factory], *, name: str | None = None, context: Context | None = None) -> Task[_T_co@eager_task_factory]`
- Found 30 diagnostics
+ Found 29 diagnostics
mitmproxy (https://github.com/mitmproxy/mitmproxy)
+ mitmproxy/utils/asyncio_utils.py:96:60: warning[unused-ignore-comment] Unused blanket `type: ignore` directive
- test/conftest.py:37:31: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument to bound method `set_task_factory` is incorrect: Expected `_TaskFactory | None`, found `def eager_task_factory[_T_co](loop: AbstractEventLoop | None, coro: Coroutine[Any, Any, _T_co@eager_task_factory], *, name: str | None = None, context: Context | None = None) -> Task[_T_co@eager_task_factory]`
```
All of these seem to be correct, they give us a different type for
`asyncio` symbols that are now imported from different
`sys.version_info` branches (where we previously failed to recognize
some of these as statically true/false).
```diff
dd-trace-py (https://github.com/DataDog/dd-trace-py)
- ddtrace/contrib/internal/asyncio/patch.py:39:12: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument to function `unwrap` is incorrect: Expected `WrappedFunction`, found `def create_task[_T](self, coro: Coroutine[Any, Any, _T@create_task] | Generator[Any, None, _T@create_task], *, name: object = None) -> Task[_T@create_task]`
+ ddtrace/contrib/internal/asyncio/patch.py:39:12: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument to function `unwrap` is incorrect: Expected `WrappedFunction`, found `def create_task[_T](self, coro: Generator[Any, None, _T@create_task] | Coroutine[Any, Any, _T@create_task], *, name: object = None) -> Task[_T@create_task]`
```
Similar, but only results in a diagnostic change.
## Test Plan
Added a regression test
This fixes a non-determinism that we were seeing in the constraint set
tests in https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/21715.
In this test, we create the following constraint set, and then try to
create a specialization from it:
```
(T@constrained_by_gradual_list = list[Base])
∨
(Bottom[list[Any]] ≤ T@constrained_by_gradual_list ≤ Top[list[Any]])
```
That is, `T` is either specifically `list[Base]`, or it's any `list`.
Our current heuristics say that, absent other restrictions, we should
specialize `T` to the more specific type (`list[Base]`).
In the correct test output, we end up creating a BDD that looks like
this:
```
(T@constrained_by_gradual_list = list[Base])
┡━₁ always
└─₀ (Bottom[list[Any]] ≤ T@constrained_by_gradual_list ≤ Top[list[Any]])
┡━₁ always
└─₀ never
```
In the incorrect output, the BDD looks like this:
```
(Bottom[list[Any]] ≤ T@constrained_by_gradual_list ≤ Top[list[Any]])
┡━₁ always
└─₀ never
```
The difference is the ordering of the two individual constraints. Both
constraints appear in the first BDD, but the second BDD only contains `T
is any list`. If we were to force the second BDD to contain both
constraints, it would look like this:
```
(Bottom[list[Any]] ≤ T@constrained_by_gradual_list ≤ Top[list[Any]])
┡━₁ always
└─₀ (T@constrained_by_gradual_list = list[Base])
┡━₁ always
└─₀ never
```
This is the standard shape for an OR of two constraints. However! Those
two constraints are not independent of each other! If `T` is
specifically `list[Base]`, then it's definitely also "any `list`". From
that, we can infer the contrapositive: that if `T` is not any list, then
it cannot be `list[Base]` specifically. When we encounter impossible
situations like that, we prune that path in the BDD, and treat it as
`false`. That rewrites the second BDD to the following:
```
(Bottom[list[Any]] ≤ T@constrained_by_gradual_list ≤ Top[list[Any]])
┡━₁ always
└─₀ (T@constrained_by_gradual_list = list[Base])
┡━₁ never <-- IMPOSSIBLE, rewritten to never
└─₀ never
```
We then would see that that BDD node is redundant, since both of its
outgoing edges point at the `never` node. Our BDDs are _reduced_, which
means we have to remove that redundant node, resulting in the BDD we saw
above:
```
(Bottom[list[Any]] ≤ T@constrained_by_gradual_list ≤ Top[list[Any]])
┡━₁ always
└─₀ never <-- redundant node removed
```
The end result is that we were "forgetting" about the `T = list[Base]`
constraint, but only for some BDD variable orderings.
To fix this, I'm leaning in to the fact that our BDDs really do need to
"remember" all of the constraints that they were created with. Some
combinations might not be possible, but we now have the sequent map,
which is quite good at detecting and pruning those.
So now our BDDs are _quasi-reduced_, which just means that redundant
nodes are allowed. (At first I was worried that allowing redundant nodes
would be an unsound "fix the glitch". But it turns out they're real!
[This](https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/130209) is the
paper that introduces them, though it's very difficult to read. Knuth
mentions them in §7.1.4 of
[TAOCP](https://course.khoury.northeastern.edu/csu690/ssl/bdd-knuth.pdf),
and [this paper](https://par.nsf.gov/servlets/purl/10128966) has a nice
short summary of them in §2.)
While we're here, I've added a bunch of `debug` and `trace` level log
messages to the constraint set implementation. I was getting tired of
having to add these by hands over and over. To enable them, just set
`TY_LOG` in your environment, e.g.
```sh
env TY_LOG=ty_python_semantic::types::constraints::SequentMap=trace ty check ...
```
[Note, this has an `internal` label because are still not using
`specialize_constrained` in anything user-facing yet.]