Commit Graph

319 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Peter 2680f2ed81
[ty] Minor: test isolation (#19597)
## Summary

Split the "Generator functions" tests into two parts. The first part
(synchronous) refers to a function called `i` from a function `i2`. But
`i` is later redeclared in the asynchronous part, which was probably not
intended.
2025-07-28 15:52:59 +02:00
Douglas Creager e867830848
[ty] Don't include already-bound legacy typevars in function generic context (#19558)
We now correctly exclude legacy typevars from enclosing scopes when
constructing the generic context for a generic function.

more detail:

A function is generic if it refers to legacy typevars in its signature:

```py
from typing import TypeVar

T = TypeVar("T")

def f(t: T) -> T:
    return t
```

Generic functions are allowed to appear inside of other generic
contexts. When they do, they can refer to the typevars of those
enclosing generic contexts, and that should not rebind the typevar:

```py
from typing import TypeVar, Generic

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

class C(Generic[T]):
    @staticmethod
    def method(t: T, u: U) -> None: ...

# revealed: def method(t: int, u: U) -> None
reveal_type(C[int].method)
```

This substitution was already being performed correctly, but we were
also still including the enclosing legacy typevars in the method's own
generic context, which can be seen via `ty_extensions.generic_context`
(which has been updated to work on generic functions and methods):

```py
from ty_extensions import generic_context

# before: tuple[T, U]
# after: tuple[U]
reveal_type(generic_context(C[int].method))
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-07-25 18:14:19 -04:00
David Peter c0768dfd96
[ty] Attribute access on intersections with negative parts (#19524)
## Summary

We currently infer a `@Todo` type whenever we access an attribute on an
intersection type with negative components. This can happen very
naturally. Consequently, this `@Todo` type is rather pervasive and hides
a lot of true positives that ty could otherwise detect:

```py
class Foo:
    attr: int = 1

def _(f: Foo | None):
    if f:
        reveal_type(f)  # Foo & ~AlwaysFalsy

        reveal_type(f.attr)  # now: int, previously: @Todo
```

The changeset here proposes to handle member access on these
intersection types by simply ignoring all negative contributions. This
is not always ideal: a negative contribution like `~<Protocol with
members 'attr'>` could be a hint that `.attr` should not be accessible
on the full intersection type. The behavior can certainly be improved in
the future, but this seems like a reasonable initial step to get rid of
this unnecessary `@Todo` type.

## Ecosystem analysis

There are quite a few changes here. I spot-checked them and found one
bug where attribute access on pure negation types (`~P == object & ~P`)
would not allow attributes on `object` to be accessed. After that was
fixed, I only see true positives and known problems. The fact that a lot
of `unused-ignore-comment` diagnostics go away are also evidence for the
fact that this touches a sensitive area, where static analysis clashes
with dynamically adding attributes to objects:
```py
… # type: ignore # Runtime attribute access
```

## Test Plan

Updated tests.
2025-07-25 14:56:14 +02:00
David Peter d4eb4277ad
[ty] Add basic support for `dataclasses.field` (#19553)
## Summary

Add basic support for `dataclasses.field`:
* remove fields with `init=False` from the signature of the synthesized
`__init__` method
* infer correct default value types from `default` or `default_factory`
arguments

```py
from dataclasses import dataclass, field

def default_roles() -> list[str]:
    return ["user"]

@dataclass
class Member:
    name: str
    roles: list[str] = field(default_factory=default_roles)
    tag: str | None = field(default=None, init=False)

# revealed: (self: Member, name: str, roles: list[str] = list[str]) -> None
reveal_type(Member.__init__)
```

Support for `kw_only` has **not** been added.

part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/111

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests
2025-07-25 14:56:04 +02:00
Alex Waygood f722bfa9e6
[ty] Do not consider a type `T` to satisfy a method member on a protocol unless the method is available on the meta-type of `T` (#19187) 2025-07-25 11:16:04 +01:00
Shunsuke Shibayama b124e182ca
[ty] improve lazy scope place lookup (#19321)
Co-authored-by: David Peter <sharkdp@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@oddbird.net>
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
2025-07-25 07:11:11 +00:00
Carl Meyer ae9d450b5f
[ty] Fallback to Unknown if no type is stored for an expression (#19517)
## Summary

See discussion at
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19478/files#r2223870292

Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/865

## Test Plan

Added one mdtest for invalid Callable annotation; removed `pull-types:
skip` from that test file.

Co-authored-by: lipefree <willy.ngo.2000@gmail.com>
2025-07-25 02:05:32 +00:00
David Peter dc6be457b5
[ty] Support `dataclasses.InitVar` (#19527)
## Summary

I saw that this creates a lot of false positives in the ecosystem, and
it seemed to be relatively easy to add basic support for this.

Some preliminary work on this was done by @InSyncWithFoo — thank you.

part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/111

## Ecosystem analysis

The results look good.

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests

---------

Co-authored-by: InSync <insyncwithfoo@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-07-24 16:33:33 +02:00
David Peter 9461d3076f
[ty] Rename type_api => ty_extensions (#19523) 2025-07-24 08:24:26 +00:00
Douglas Creager e0149cd9f3
[ty] Return a tuple spec from the iterator protocol (#19496)
This PR updates our iterator protocol machinery to return a tuple spec
describing the elements that are returned, instead of a type. That
allows us to track heterogeneous iterators more precisely, and
consolidates the logic in unpacking and splatting, which are the two
places where we can take advantage of that more precise information.
(Other iterator consumers, like `for` loops, have to collapse the
iterated elements down to a single type regardless, and we provide a new
helper method on `TupleSpec` to perform that summarization.)
2025-07-23 17:11:44 -04:00
David Peter 2a00eca66b
[ty] Exhaustiveness checking & reachability for `match` statements (#19508)
## Summary

Implements proper reachability analysis and — in effect — exhaustiveness
checking for `match` statements. This allows us to check the following
code without any errors (leads to *"can implicitly return `None`"* on
`main`):

```py
from enum import Enum, auto

class Color(Enum):
    RED = auto()
    GREEN = auto()
    BLUE = auto()

def hex(color: Color) -> str:
    match color:
        case Color.RED:
            return "#ff0000"
        case Color.GREEN:
            return "#00ff00"
        case Color.BLUE:
            return "#0000ff"
```

Note that code like this already worked fine if there was a
`assert_never(color)` statement in a catch-all case, because we would
then consider that `assert_never` call terminal. But now this also works
without the wildcard case. Adding a member to the enum would still lead
to an error here, if that case would not be handled in `hex`.

What needed to happen to support this is a new way of evaluating match
pattern constraints. Previously, we would simply compare the type of the
subject expression against the patterns. For the last case here, the
subject type would still be `Color` and the value type would be
`Literal[Color.BLUE]`, so we would infer an ambiguous truthiness.

Now, before we compare the subject type against the pattern, we first
generate a union type that corresponds to the set of all values that
would have *definitely been matched* by previous patterns. Then, we
build a "narrowed" subject type by computing `subject_type &
~already_matched_type`, and compare *that* against the pattern type. For
the example here, `already_matched_type = Literal[Color.RED] |
Literal[Color.GREEN]`, and so we have a narrowed subject type of `Color
& ~(Literal[Color.RED] | Literal[Color.GREEN]) = Literal[Color.BLUE]`,
which allows us to infer a reachability of `AlwaysTrue`.

<details>

<summary>A note on negated reachability constraints</summary>

It might seem that we now perform duplicate work, because we also record
*negated* reachability constraints. But that is still important for
cases like the following (and possibly also for more realistic
scenarios):

```py
from typing import Literal

def _(x: int | str):
    match x:
        case None:
            pass # never reachable
        case _:
            y = 1

    y
```

</details>

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/99

## Test Plan

* I verified that this solves all examples from the linked ticket (the
first example needs a PEP 695 type alias, because we don't support
legacy type aliases yet)
* Verified that the ecosystem changes are all because of removed false
positives
* Updated tests
2025-07-23 22:45:45 +02:00
David Peter 3d17897c02
[ty] Fix narrowing and reachability of class patterns with arguments (#19512)
## Summary

I noticed that our type narrowing and reachability analysis was
incorrect for class patterns that are not irrefutable. The test cases
below compare the old and the new behavior:

```py
from dataclasses import dataclass

@dataclass
class Point:
    x: int
    y: int

class Other: ...

def _(target: Point):
    y = 1

    match target:
        case Point(0, 0):
            y = 2
        case Point(x=0, y=1):
            y = 3
        case Point(x=1, y=0):
            y = 4
    
    reveal_type(y)  # revealed: Literal[1, 2, 3, 4]    (previously: Literal[2])


def _(target: Point | Other):
    match target:
        case Point(0, 0):
            reveal_type(target)  # revealed: Point
        case Point(x=0, y=1):
            reveal_type(target)  # revealed: Point    (previously: Never)
        case Point(x=1, y=0):
            reveal_type(target)  # revealed: Point    (previously: Never)
        case Other():
            reveal_type(target)  # revealed: Other    (previously: Other & ~Point)
```

## Test Plan

New Markdown test
2025-07-23 18:45:03 +02:00
Jack O'Connor 88bd82938f
[ty] highlight the argument in `static_assert` error messages (#19426)
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/209.

Before:
```
error[static-assert-error]: Static assertion error: custom message
 --> test.py:2:1
  |
1 | from ty_extensions import static_assert
2 | static_assert(3 > 4, "custom message")
  | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  |
```

After:
```
error[static-assert-error]: Static assertion error: custom message
 --> test.py:2:1
  |
1 | from ty_extensions import static_assert
2 | static_assert(3 > 4, "custom message")
  | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^-----^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  |               |
  |               Inferred type of argument is `Literal[False]`
  |
```
2025-07-23 08:24:12 -07:00
David Peter 5a55bab3f3
[ty] Infer single-valuedness for enums based on `int`/`str` (#19510)
## Summary

We previously didn't recognize `Literal[Color.RED]` as single-valued, if
the enum also derived from `str` or `int`:
```py
from enum import Enum

class Color(str, Enum):
    RED = "red"
    GREEN = "green"
    BLUE = "blue"

def _(color: Color):
    if color == Color.RED:
        reveal_type(color)  # previously: Color, now: Literal[Color.RED]
```

The reason for that was that `int` and `str` have "custom" `__eq__` and
`__ne__` implementations that return `bool`. We do not treat enum
literals from classes with custom `__eq__` and `__ne__` implementations
as single-valued, but of course we know that `int.__eq__` and
`str.__eq__` are well-behaved.

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests.
2025-07-23 15:55:42 +02:00
David Peter 905b9d7f51
[ty] Reachability analysis for `isinstance(…)` branches (#19503)
## Summary

Add more precise type inference for a limited set of `isinstance(…)`
calls, i.e. return `Literal[True]` if we can be sure that this is the
correct result. This improves exhaustiveness checking / reachability
analysis for if-elif-else chains with `isinstance` checks. For example:

```py
def is_number(x: int | str) -> bool:  # no "can implicitly return `None` error here anymore
    if isinstance(x, int):
        return True
    elif isinstance(x, str):
        return False

    # code here is now detected as being unreachable
```

This PR also adds a new test suite for exhaustiveness checking.

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests

### Ecosystem analysis

The removed diagnostics look good. There's [one
case](f52c4f1afd/torchvision/io/video_reader.py (L125-L143))
where a "true positive" is removed in unreachable code. `src` is
annotated as being of type `str`, but there is an `elif isinstance(src,
bytes)` branch, which we now detect as unreachable. And so the
diagnostic inside that branch is silenced. I don't think this is a
problem, especially once we have a "graying out" feature, or a lint that
warns about unreachable code.
2025-07-23 13:06:30 +02:00
David Peter b605c3e232
[ty] Normalize single-member enums to their instance type (#19502)
## Summary

Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/874

Labeling this as `internal`, since we haven't released the
enum-expansion feature.

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests
2025-07-23 10:14:20 +02:00
David Peter 385d6fa608
[ty] Detect enums if metaclass is a subtype of EnumType/EnumMeta (#19481)
## Summary

This PR implements the following section from the [typing spec on
enums](https://typing.python.org/en/latest/spec/enums.html#enum-definition):

> Enum classes can also be defined using a subclass of `enum.Enum` **or
any class that uses `enum.EnumType` (or a subclass thereof) as a
metaclass**. Note that `enum.EnumType` was named `enum.EnumMeta` prior
to Python 3.11.

part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/183

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests
2025-07-23 08:46:51 +02:00
Jack O'Connor ba070bb6d5
[ty] perform type narrowing for places marked `global` too (#19381)
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/311.
2025-07-22 16:42:10 -07:00
Douglas Creager 7673d46b71
[ty] Splat variadic arguments into parameter list (#18996)
This PR updates our call binding logic to handle splatted arguments.

Complicating matters is that we have separated call bind analysis into
two phases: parameter matching and type checking. Parameter matching
looks at the arity of the function signature and call site, and assigns
arguments to parameters. Importantly, we don't yet know the type of each
argument! This is needed so that we can decide whether to infer the type
of each argument as a type form or value form, depending on the
requirements of the parameter that the argument was matched to.

This is an issue when splatting an argument, since we need to know how
many elements the splatted argument contains to know how many positional
parameters to match it against. And to know how many elements the
splatted argument has, we need to know its type.

To get around this, we now make the assumption that splatted arguments
can only be used with value-form parameters. (If you end up splatting an
argument into a type-form parameter, we will silently pass in its
value-form type instead.) That allows us to preemptively infer the
(value-form) type of any splatted argument, so that we have its arity
available during parameter matching. We defer inference of non-splatted
arguments until after parameter matching has finished, as before.

We reuse a lot of the new tuple machinery to make this happen — in
particular resizing the tuple spec representing the number of arguments
passed in with the tuple length representing the number of parameters
the splat was matched with.

This work also shows that we might need to change how we are performing
argument expansion during overload resolution. At the moment, when we
expand parameters, we assume that each argument will still be matched to
the same parameters as before, and only retry the type-checking phase.
With splatted arguments, this is no longer the case, since the inferred
arity of each union element might be different than the arity of the
union as a whole, which can affect how many parameters the splatted
argument is matched to. See the regression test case in
`mdtest/call/function.md` for more details.
2025-07-22 14:33:08 -04:00
David Peter 64e5780037
[ty] Consistent use of American english (in rules) (#19488)
## Summary

Just noticed this as a minor inconsistency in our rules, and had Claude
do a few more automated replacements.
2025-07-22 16:10:38 +02:00
David Peter da8aa6a631
[ty] Support iterating over enums (#19486)
## Summary

Infer the correct type in a scenario like this:

```py
class Color(Enum):
    RED = 1
    GREEN = 2
    BLUE = 3

for color in Color:
    reveal_type(color)  # revealed: Color
```

We should eventually support this out-of-the-box when
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/501 is implemented. For this
reason, @AlexWaygood would prefer to keep things as they are (we
currently infer `Unknown`, so false positives seem unlikely). But it
seemed relatively easy to support, so I'm opening this for discussion.

part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/183

## Test Plan

Adapted existing test.

## Ecosystem analysis

```diff
- warning[unused-ignore-comment] rotkehlchen/chain/aggregator.py:591:82: Unused blanket `type: ignore` directive
```

This `unused-ignore-comment` goes away due to a new true positive.
2025-07-22 16:09:28 +02:00
David Peter ee69d38000
Fix panic for illegal `Literal[…]` annotations with inner subscript expressions (#19489)
## Summary

Fixes pull-types panics for illegal annotations like
`Literal[object[index]]`.

Originally reported by @AlexWaygood

## Test Plan

* Verified that this caused panics in the playground, when typing (and
potentially hovering over) `x: Literal[obj[0]]`.
* Added a regression test
2025-07-22 14:07:20 +00:00
David Peter 6d4687c9af
[ty] Disallow illegal uses of `ClassVar` (#19483)
## Summary

It was faster to implement this then to write the ticket: Disallow
`ClassVar` annotations almost everywhere outside of class body scopes.

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests
2025-07-22 14:21:29 +02:00
David Peter 9180cd094d
[ty] Disallow `Final` in function parameter/return-type annotations (#19480)
## Summary

Disallow `Final` in function parameter- and return-type annotations.

[Typing
spec](https://typing.python.org/en/latest/spec/qualifiers.html#uppercase-final):

> `Final` may only be used in assignments or variable annotations. Using
it in any other position is an error. In particular, `Final` can’t be
used in annotations for function arguments

## Test Plan

Updated MD test
2025-07-22 13:15:19 +02:00
David Peter 9d98a66f65
[ty] Extend `Final` test suite (#19476)
## Summary

Restructures and cleans up the `typing.Final` test suite. Also adds a
few more tests with TODOs based on the [typing spec for
`typing.Final`](https://typing.python.org/en/latest/spec/qualifiers.html#uppercase-final).
2025-07-22 12:06:47 +02:00
David Peter 215a1c55d4
[ty] Detect illegal non-enum attribute accesses in Literal annotation (#19477)
## Summary

Detect illegal attribute accesses in `Literal[X.Y]` annotations if `X`
is not an enum class.

## Test Plan

New Markdown test
2025-07-22 11:42:03 +02:00
David Peter 30683e3a93 Revert "[ty] Detect illegal non-enum attribute accesses in Literal annotation"
This reverts commit cbc8c08016.
2025-07-22 09:19:44 +02:00
David Peter cbc8c08016 [ty] Detect illegal non-enum attribute accesses in Literal annotation 2025-07-22 09:18:50 +02:00
Alex Waygood cb5a9ff8dc
[ty] Make tuple subclass constructors sound (#19469) 2025-07-21 21:25:11 +00:00
David Peter fcdffe4ac9
[ty] Pass down specialization to generic dataclass bases (#19472)
## Summary

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/853

## Test Plan

Regression test
2025-07-21 20:51:58 +02:00
David Peter b8dec79182
[ty] Implicit instance attributes declared `Final` (#19462)
## Summary

Adds proper type inference for implicit instance attributes that are
declared with a "bare" `Final` and adds `invalid-assignment` diagnostics
for all implicit instance attributes that are declared `Final` or
`Final[…]`.

## Test Plan

New and updated MD tests.

## Ecosystem analysis

```diff
pytest (https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest)
+ error[invalid-return-type] src/_pytest/fixtures.py:1662:24: Return type does not match returned value: expected `Scope`, found `Scope | (Unknown & ~None & ~((...) -> object) & ~str) | (((str, Config, /) -> Unknown) & ~((...) -> object) & ~str) | (Unknown & ~str)
```

The definition of the `scope` attribute is [here](

5f99385635/src/_pytest/fixtures.py (L1020-L1028)).
Looks like this is a new false positive due to missing `TypeAlias`
support that is surfaced here because we now infer a more precise type
for `FixtureDef._scope`.
2025-07-21 20:01:07 +02:00
David Peter dc66019fbc
[ty] Expansion of enums into unions of literals (#19382)
## Summary

Implement expansion of enums into unions of enum literals (and the
reverse operation). For the enum below, this allows us to understand
that `Color = Literal[Color.RED, Color.GREEN, Color.BLUE]`, or that
`Color & ~Literal[Color.RED] = Literal[Color.GREEN, Color.BLUE]`. This
helps in exhaustiveness checking, which is why we see some removed
`assert_never` false positives. And since exhaustiveness checking also
helps with understanding terminal control flow, we also see a few
removed `invalid-return-type` and `possibly-unresolved-reference` false
positives. This PR also adds expansion of enums in overload resolution
and type narrowing constructs.

```py
from enum import Enum
from typing_extensions import Literal, assert_never
from ty_extensions import Intersection, Not, static_assert, is_equivalent_to

class Color(Enum):
    RED = 1
    GREEN = 2
    BLUE = 3

type Red = Literal[Color.RED]
type Green = Literal[Color.GREEN]
type Blue = Literal[Color.BLUE]

static_assert(is_equivalent_to(Red | Green | Blue, Color))
static_assert(is_equivalent_to(Intersection[Color, Not[Red]], Green | Blue))


def color_name(color: Color) -> str:  # no error here (we detect that this can not implicitly return None)
    if color is Color.RED:
        return "Red"
    elif color is Color.GREEN:
        return "Green"
    elif color is Color.BLUE:
        return "Blue"
    else:
        assert_never(color)  # no error here
```

## Performance

I avoided an initial regression here for large enums, but the
`UnionBuilder` and `IntersectionBuilder` parts can certainly still be
optimized. We might want to use the same technique that we also use for
unions of other literals. I didn't see any problems in our benchmarks so
far, so this is not included yet.

## Test Plan

Many new Markdown tests
2025-07-21 19:37:55 +02:00
github-actions[bot] 3785e13231
[ty] Sync vendored typeshed stubs (#19461)
Co-authored-by: typeshedbot <>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2025-07-21 14:01:42 +01:00
Alex Waygood c2380fa0e2
[ty] Extend tuple `__len__` and `__bool__` special casing to also cover tuple subclasses (#19289)
Co-authored-by: Brent Westbrook
2025-07-21 12:50:46 +00:00
David Peter b6579eaf04
[ty] Disallow assignment to `Final` class attributes (#19457)
## Summary

Emit errors for the following assignments:
```py
class C:
    CLASS_LEVEL_CONSTANT: Final[int] = 1

C.CLASS_LEVEL_CONSTANT = 2
C().CLASS_LEVEL_CONSTANT = 2
```

## Test Plan

Updated and new MD tests
2025-07-21 14:27:56 +02:00
Aria Desires 06f9f52e59
[ty] Add support for `@warnings.deprecated` (#19376)
* [x] basic handling
  * [x] parse and discover `@warnings.deprecated` attributes
  * [x] associate them with function definitions
  * [x] associate them with class definitions
  * [x] add a new "deprecated" diagnostic
* [x] ensure diagnostic is styled appropriately for LSPs
(DiagnosticTag::Deprecated)

* [x] functions
  * [x] fire on calls
  * [x] fire on arbitrary references 
* [x] classes
  * [x] fire on initializers
  * [x] fire on arbitrary references
* [x] methods
  * [x] fire on calls
  * [x] fire on arbitrary references
* [ ] overloads
  * [ ] fire on calls
  * [ ] fire on arbitrary references(??? maybe not ???)
  * [ ] only fire if the actual selected overload is deprecated 

* [ ] dunder desugarring (warn on deprecated `__add__` if `+` is
invoked)
* [ ] alias supression? (don't warn on uses of variables that deprecated
items were assigned to)

* [ ] import logic
  * [x] fire on imports of deprecated items
* [ ] suppress subsequent diagnostics if the import diagnostic fired (is
this handled by alias supression?)
  * [x] fire on all qualified references (`module.mydeprecated`)
  * [x] fire on all references that depend on a `*` import
    


Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/153
2025-07-18 23:50:29 +00:00
Jack O'Connor e9a64e5825
[ty] make `del x` force local resolution of `x` in the current scope (#19389)
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/769.

**Updated:** The preferred approach here is to keep the SemanticIndex
simple (`del` of any name marks that name "bound" in the current scope)
and to move complexity to type inference (free variable resolution stops
when it finds a binding, unless that binding is declared `nonlocal`). As
part of this change, free variable resolution will now union the types
it finds as it walks in enclosing scopes. This approach is still
incomplete, because it doesn't consider inner scopes or sibling scopes,
but it improves the common case.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-07-18 14:58:32 -07:00
Andrew Gallant ba7ed3a6f9
[ty] Use `…` as the "cut" indicator in diagnostic rendering (#19420)
This makes ty match ruff's behavior. Specifically, we want to use `…`
instead of the default `...` because `...` has special significance in
Python.
2025-07-18 07:46:48 -04:00
justin 39b41838f3
[ty] synthesize __setattr__ for frozen dataclasses (#19307)
## Summary

Synthesize a `__setattr__` method with a return type of `Never` for
frozen dataclasses.

https://docs.python.org/3/library/dataclasses.html#frozen-instances

https://docs.python.org/3/library/dataclasses.html#dataclasses.FrozenInstanceError

### Related
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/111
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/17974#discussion_r2108527106
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/18347#discussion_r2128174665

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests

---------

Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
2025-07-18 11:35:05 +02:00
Matthew Mckee cbe94b094b
[ty] Support empty function bodies in `if TYPE_CHECKING` blocks (#19372)
## Summary

Resolves https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/339

Supports having a blank function body inside `if TYPE_CHECKING` block or
in the elif or else of a `if not TYPE_CHECKING` block.

```py
if TYPE_CHECKING:
    def foo() -> int: ...

if not TYPE_CHECKING: ...
else:     
    def bar() -> int: ...
```

## Test Plan

Update `function/return_type.md`

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-07-16 14:48:04 -06:00
Jack O'Connor 5f2e855c29 allow reads of "free" variables to refer to a `global` declaration
Previously this worked if there was also a binding in the same scope as
the `global` declaration (probably almost always the case), but CPython
doesn't require this.

This change surfaced an error in an existing test, where a global
variable was only ever declared and bound using the `global` keyword,
and never mentioned explicitly in the global scope. @AlexWaygood
suggested we probably want to keep that requirement, so I'm adding an a
new test for that on top of fixing the failing test.
2025-07-16 08:30:42 -07:00
Jack O'Connor 3b4667ec32 respect annotation-only declarations in `infer_place_load` 2025-07-16 08:30:42 -07:00
Jack O'Connor e73a8ba571 lint on the `global` keyword if there's no explicit definition in the global scope 2025-07-15 16:56:54 -07:00
David Peter a1edb69ea5
[ty] Enum literal types (#19328)
## Summary

Add a new `Type::EnumLiteral(…)` variant and infer this type for member
accesses on enums.

**Example**: No more `@Todo` types here:
```py
from enum import Enum

class Answer(Enum):
    YES = 1
    NO = 2

    def is_yes(self) -> bool:
        return self == Answer.YES

reveal_type(Answer.YES)  # revealed: Literal[Answer.YES]
reveal_type(Answer.YES == Answer.NO)  # revealed: Literal[False]
reveal_type(Answer.YES.is_yes())  # revealed: bool
```

## Test Plan

* Many new Markdown tests for the new type variant
* Added enum literal types to property tests, ran property tests

## Ecosystem analysis

Summary:

Lots of false positives removed. All of the new diagnostics are
either new true positives (the majority) or known problems. Click for
detailed analysis</summary>

Details:

```diff
AutoSplit (https://github.com/Toufool/AutoSplit)
+ error[call-non-callable] src/capture_method/__init__.py:137:9: Method `__getitem__` of type `bound method CaptureMethodDict.__getitem__(key: Never, /) -> type[CaptureMethodBase]` is not callable on object of type `CaptureMethodDict`
+ error[call-non-callable] src/capture_method/__init__.py:147:9: Method `__getitem__` of type `bound method CaptureMethodDict.__getitem__(key: Never, /) -> type[CaptureMethodBase]` is not callable on object of type `CaptureMethodDict`
+ error[call-non-callable] src/capture_method/__init__.py:148:1: Method `__getitem__` of type `bound method CaptureMethodDict.__getitem__(key: Never, /) -> type[CaptureMethodBase]` is not callable on object of type `CaptureMethodDict`
```

New true positives. That `__getitem__` method is apparently annotated
with `Never` to prevent developers from using it.


```diff
dd-trace-py (https://github.com/DataDog/dd-trace-py)
+ error[invalid-assignment] ddtrace/vendor/psutil/_common.py:29:5: Object of type `None` is not assignable to `Literal[AddressFamily.AF_INET6]`
+ error[invalid-assignment] ddtrace/vendor/psutil/_common.py:33:5: Object of type `None` is not assignable to `Literal[AddressFamily.AF_UNIX]`
```

Arguably true positives:
e0a772c28b/ddtrace/vendor/psutil/_common.py (L29)

```diff
ignite (https://github.com/pytorch/ignite)
+ error[invalid-argument-type] tests/ignite/engine/test_custom_events.py:190:34: Argument to bound method `__call__` is incorrect: Expected `((...) -> Unknown) | None`, found `Literal["123"]`
+ error[invalid-argument-type] tests/ignite/engine/test_custom_events.py:220:37: Argument to function `default_event_filter` is incorrect: Expected `Engine`, found `None`
+ error[invalid-argument-type] tests/ignite/engine/test_custom_events.py:220:43: Argument to function `default_event_filter` is incorrect: Expected `int`, found `None`
+ error[call-non-callable] tests/ignite/engine/test_custom_events.py:561:9: Object of type `CustomEvents` is not callable
+ error[invalid-argument-type] tests/ignite/metrics/test_frequency.py:50:38: Argument to bound method `attach` is incorrect: Expected `Events`, found `CallableEventWithFilter`
```

All true positives. Some of them are inside `pytest.raises(TypeError,
…)` blocks 🙃

```diff
meson (https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson)
+ error[invalid-argument-type] unittests/internaltests.py:243:51: Argument to bound method `__init__` is incorrect: Expected `bool`, found `Literal[MachineChoice.HOST]`
+ error[invalid-argument-type] unittests/internaltests.py:271:51: Argument to bound method `__init__` is incorrect: Expected `bool`, found `Literal[MachineChoice.HOST]`
```

New true positives. Enum literals can not be assigned to `bool`, even if
their value types are `0` and `1`.

```diff
poetry (https://github.com/python-poetry/poetry)
+ error[invalid-assignment] src/poetry/console/exceptions.py:101:5: Object of type `Literal[""]` is not assignable to `InitVar[str]`
```

New false positive, missing support for `InitVar`.

```diff
prefect (https://github.com/PrefectHQ/prefect)
+ error[invalid-argument-type] src/integrations/prefect-dask/tests/test_task_runners.py:193:17: Argument is incorrect: Expected `StateType`, found `Literal[StateType.COMPLETED]`
```

This is confusing. There are two definitions
([one](74d8cd93ee/src/prefect/client/schemas/objects.py (L89-L100)),
[two](https://github.com/PrefectHQ/prefect/blob/main/src/prefect/server/schemas/states.py#L40))
of the `StateType` enum. Here, we're trying to assign one to the other.
I don't think that should be allowed, so this is a true positive (?).

```diff
python-htmlgen (https://github.com/srittau/python-htmlgen)
+ error[invalid-assignment] test_htmlgen/form.py:51:9: Object of type `str` is not assignable to attribute `autocomplete` of type `Autocomplete | None`
+ error[invalid-assignment] test_htmlgen/video.py:38:9: Object of type `str` is not assignable to attribute `preload` of type `Preload | None`
```

True positives. [The stubs are
wrong](01e3b911ac/htmlgen/form.pyi (L8-L10)).
These should not contain type annotations, but rather just `OFF = ...`.

```diff
rotki (https://github.com/rotki/rotki)
+ error[invalid-argument-type] rotkehlchen/tests/unit/test_serialization.py:62:30: Argument to bound method `deserialize` is incorrect: Expected `str`, found `Literal[15]`
```

New true positive.

```diff
vision (https://github.com/pytorch/vision)
+ error[unresolved-attribute] test/test_extended_models.py:302:17: Type `type[WeightsEnum]` has no attribute `DEFAULT`
+ error[unresolved-attribute] test/test_extended_models.py:302:58: Type `type[WeightsEnum]` has no attribute `DEFAULT`
```

Also new true positives. No `DEFAULT` member exists on `WeightsEnum`.
2025-07-15 21:31:53 +02:00
github-actions[bot] a0d4e1f854
[ty] Sync vendored typeshed stubs (#19368)
Co-authored-by: typeshedbot <>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2025-07-15 18:14:46 +00:00
Jack O'Connor a357a68fc9 distinguish references from definitions in `infer_nonlocal`
The initial implementation of `infer_nonlocal` landed in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19112 fails to report an error
for this example:

```py
x = 1
def f():
    # This is only a usage of `x`, not a definition. It shouldn't be
    # enough to make the `nonlocal` statement below allowed.
    print(x)
    def g():
        nonlocal x
```

Fix this by continuing to walk enclosing scopes when the place we've
found isn't bound, declared, or `nonlocal`.
2025-07-15 07:55:40 -07:00
Alex Waygood 002f9057db
[ty] Reduce false positives for `TypedDict` types (#19354) 2025-07-15 12:47:19 +01:00
github-actions[bot] 4f60f0e925
[ty] Sync vendored typeshed stubs (#19334)
Co-authored-by: typeshedbot <>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2025-07-14 17:34:09 +01:00
David Peter f22da352db
[ty] List all `enum` members (#19283)
## Summary

Adds a way to list all members of an `Enum` and implements almost all of
the mechanisms by which members are distinguished from non-members
([spec](https://typing.python.org/en/latest/spec/enums.html#defining-members)).
This has no effect on actual enums, so far.

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests using `ty_extensions.enum_members`.
2025-07-14 13:18:17 +02:00
Jack O'Connor 78bd73f25a [ty] add support for `nonlocal` statements 2025-07-11 09:44:54 -07:00
Alex Waygood 934aaa23f3
[ty] Improve and document equivalence for module-literal types (#19243) 2025-07-10 09:11:10 +00:00
Matthew Mckee f32f7a3b48
[ty] Fix `ClassLiteral.into_callable` for dataclasses (#19192)
## Summary

Change `ClassLiteral.into_callable` to also look for `__init__` functions
of type `Type::Callable` (such as synthesized `__init__` functions of
dataclasses).

Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/760

## Test Plan

Add subtype test

---------

Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
2025-07-09 10:04:55 +02:00
David Peter 68106dd631
[ty] `dataclasses.field` support (#19140)
## Summary

Add an initial set of tests for `dataclasses.field`.
2025-07-09 09:18:08 +02:00
David Peter 1a099886ab
[ty] Improved diagnostic for reassignments of `Final` symbols (#19214)
## Summary

Implement [this
suggestion](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19178#discussion_r2192658146)
by @AlexWaygood.


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f183d691-ef6e-43a2-b005-3a32205bc408)
2025-07-08 20:29:07 +02:00
David Peter a8f2c26143
[ty] Use full range for assignment definitions (#19211)
## Summary

Fix the `full_range` function for (annotated) assignment definition
kinds.

## Test Plan

Update snapshot tests
2025-07-08 19:51:09 +02:00
David Peter 149350bf39
[ty] Enforce `typing.Final` (#19178)
## Summary

Emit a diagnostic when a `Final`-qualified symbol is modified. This
first iteration only works for name targets. Tests with TODO comments
were added for attribute assignments as well.

related ticket: https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/158

## Ecosystem impact

Correctly identified [modification of a `Final`
symbol](7b4164a5f2/sphinx/__init__.py (L44))
(behind a `# type: ignore`):
```diff
- warning[unused-ignore-comment] sphinx/__init__.py:44:56: Unused blanket `type: ignore` directive
```
And the same
[here](5471a37e82/src/trio/_core/_run.py (L128)):
```diff
- warning[unused-ignore-comment] src/trio/_core/_run.py:128:45: Unused blanket `type: ignore` directive
```

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests
2025-07-08 16:26:09 +02:00
David Peter ce2bdb9357
[ty] Conditionally defined dataclass fields (#19197)
## Summary

Fixes a bug where conditionally defined dataclass fields were previously
ignored.

Thanks to @lipefree for reporting this.

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests
2025-07-08 16:16:50 +02:00
justin 738692baff
[ty] Fix __setattr__ call check precedence during attribute assignment (#18347)
## Summary

Related:

- https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/111
- https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/17974#discussion_r2108527106

Previously, when validating an attribute assignment, a `__setattr__`
call check was only done if the attribute wasn't found as either a class
member or instance member

This PR changes the `__setattr__` call check to be attempted first,
prior to the "[normal
mechanism](https://docs.python.org/3/reference/datamodel.html#object.__setattr__)",
as a defined `__setattr__` should take precedence over setting an
attribute on the instance dictionary directly.

if the return type of `__setattr__` is `Never`, an `invalid-assignment`
diagnostic is emitted

Once this is merged, a subsequent PR will synthesize a `__setattr__`
method with a `Never` return type for frozen dataclasses.

## Test Plan

Existing tests + mypy_primer

---------

Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
2025-07-08 15:34:34 +02:00
David Peter 9a4b85d845
[ty] Add tests for dataclass fields annotated with `Final` (#19202)
## Summary

Adds some tests for dataclass fields that are annotated with `Final`
(see comment
[here](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15768#issuecomment-3044737645)).
Turns out that nothing is needed here, everything already works as
expected (apart from the fact that we can assign to `Final` fields,
which is tracked in https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/158

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests
2025-07-08 12:33:46 +00:00
David Peter 6d8c84bde9
[ty] Clarify diagnostic message (#19203)
This diagnostic message was missing the word "type"
2025-07-08 14:21:20 +02:00
David Peter e7fb3684e8
[ty] Bare `ClassVar` annotations (#15768)
## Summary

It was recently clarified in the [typing
spec](https://typing.python.org/en/latest/spec/class-compat.html#classvar)
that bare `ClassVar` annotations are allowed. For annotated assignments
with a right hand side value, the spec requires type checkers to infer
the type as something "to which [the] value is assignable". For a value
of `2`, the spec suggests `int`, `Literal[2]`, or `Any` as examples.
Here, we choose `Unknown | Literal[2]` instead, conforming with out
usual treatment of attribute types.

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/211
2025-07-07 15:04:27 +02:00
Alex Waygood a6637964d2
[ty] Implement equivalence for protocols with method members (#18659)
## Summary

This PR implements the following pieces of `Protocol` semantics:
1. A protocol with a method member that does not have a fully static
signature should not be considered fully static. I.e., this protocol is
not fully static because `Foo.x` has no return type; we previously
incorrectly considered that it was:
  ```py
  class Foo(Protocol):
      def f(self): ...
  ```
2. Two protocols `P1` and `P2`, both with method members `x`, should be
considered equivalent if the signature of `P1.x` is equivalent to the
signature of `P2.x`. Currently we do not recognize this.

Implementing these semantics requires distinguishing between method
members and non-method members. The stored type of a method member must
be eagerly upcast to a `Callable` type when collecting the protocol's
interface: doing otherwise would mean that it would be hard to implement
equivalence of protocols even in the face of differently ordered unions,
since the two equivalent protocols would have different Salsa IDs even
when normalized.

The semantics implemented by this PR are that we consider something a
method member if:
1. It is accessible on the class itself; and
2. It is a function-like callable: a callable type that also has a
`__get__` method, meaning it can be used as a method when accessed on
instances.

Note that the spec has complicated things to say about classmethod
members and staticmethod members. These semantics are not implemented by
this PR; they are all deferred for now.

The infrastructure added in this PR fixes bugs in its own right, but
also lays the groundwork for implementing subtyping and assignability
rules for method members of protocols. A (currently failing) test is
added to verify this.

## Test Plan

mdtests
2025-07-07 12:28:32 +01:00
David Peter c15aa572ff
[ty] Use RHS inferred type for bare `Final` symbols (#19142)
## Summary

Infer the type of symbols with a `Final` qualifier as their
right-hand-side inferred type:
```py
x: Final = 1
y: Final[int] = 1

def _():
    reveal_type(x)  # previously: Unknown, now: Literal[1]
    reveal_type(y)  # int, same as before
```
Part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/158

## Ecosystem analysis

### aiohttp

```diff
aiohttp (https://github.com/aio-libs/aiohttp)
+ error[invalid-argument-type] aiohttp/compression_utils.py:131:54: Argument to bound method `__init__` is incorrect: Expected `ZLibBackendProtocol`, found `<module 'zlib'>`
```

This code [creates a
protocol](a83597fa88/aiohttp/compression_utils.py (L52-L77))
that looks like
```pyi
class ZLibBackendProtocol(Protocol):
    Z_FULL_FLUSH: int
    Z_SYNC_FLUSH: int
    # more fields…
```

It then [tries to
assign](a83597fa88/aiohttp/compression_utils.py (L131))
the module literal `zlib` to that protocol. Howefer, in typeshed, these
`zlib` members are annotated like this:
```pyi
Z_FULL_FLUSH: Final = 3
Z_SYNC_FLUSH: Final = 2
```
With the proposed change here, we now infer these as `Literal[3]` /
`Literal[2]`. Since protocol members have to be assignable both ways
(invariance), we do not consider `zlib` assignable to this protocol
anymore.

That seems rather unfortunate. Not sure who is to blame here? That
`ZLibBackendProtocol` protocol should probably not annotate the members
with `int`, given that `typeshed` doesn't use an explicit annotation
here either? But what should they do instead? Annotate those fields with
`Any`?

Or is it another case where we should consider literal-widening?

FYI @AlexWaygood 

### cloud-init

```diff
cloud-init (https://github.com/canonical/cloud-init)
+ error[invalid-argument-type] tests/unittests/sources/test_smartos.py:575:32: Argument to function `oct` is incorrect: Expected `SupportsIndex`, found `int | float`
+ error[invalid-argument-type] tests/unittests/sources/test_smartos.py:593:32: Argument to function `oct` is incorrect: Expected `SupportsIndex`, found `int | float`
+ error[invalid-argument-type] tests/unittests/sources/test_smartos.py:647:35: Argument to function `oct` is incorrect: Expected `SupportsIndex`, found `int | float`
```

New false positives on expressions like
`oct(os.stat(legacy_script_f)[stat.ST_MODE])`. We now correctly infer
`stat.ST_MODE` as `Literal[1]`, because in typeshed, it is annotated as
`ST_MODE: Final = 0`. `os.stat` returns a `stat_result` which is a tuple
subclass. Accessing it at index 0 should return an `int`, but we
currently return `int | float`, presumably due to missing support for
tuple subclasses (FYI @AlexWaygood):
```pyi
class stat_result(structseq[float], tuple[int, int, int, int, int, int, int, float, float, float]):
```
In terms of `typing.Final`, things are working as expected here.


### pywin-32

Many new false positives similar to:

```diff
pywin32 (https://github.com/mhammond/pywin32)
+ error[invalid-argument-type] Pythonwin/pywin/docking/DockingBar.py:288:55: Argument to function `LoadCursor` is incorrect: Expected `PyResourceId`, found `Literal[32645]`
```

The line in question calls `win32api.LoadCursor(0, win32con.IDC_ARROW)`.
The `win32con.IDC_ARROW` symbol is annotated as [`IDC_ARROW: Final =
32512` in
typeshed](2408c028f4/stubs/pywin32/win32/lib/win32con.pyi (L594)),
but
[`LoadCursor`](2408c028f4/stubs/pywin32/win32/win32api.pyi (L197))
expects a
[`PyResourceId`](2408c028f4/stubs/pywin32/_win32typing.pyi (L1252)),
which is an empty class. So.. this seems like a true positive to me,
unless that typeshed annotation of `IDC_ARROW` is meant to imply that
the type should be `Unknown`/`Any`?

### streamlit

```diff
streamlit (https://github.com/streamlit/streamlit)
+ error[invalid-argument-type] lib/streamlit/string_util.py:163:37: Argument to bound method `translate` is incorrect: Expected `bytes`, found `bytearray`
```

This looks like a true positive? The code calls `inp.translate(None,
TEXTCHARS)`. `inp` is `bytes`, and `TEXTCHARS` is:
```py
TEXTCHARS: Final = bytearray(
    {7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 27} | set(range(0x20, 0x100)) - {0x7F}
)
```
~~We now infer this as `bytearray`, but `bytes.translate` [expects
`bytes` for its `delete`
parameter](2408c028f4/stdlib/builtins.pyi (L710)).
This seems to work at runtime, so maybe the typeshed annotation is
wrong?~~ (Edit: this is now fixed in typeshed)
```pycon
>>> b"abc".translate(None, bytearray(b"b"))
b'ac'
```

## rotki

```diff
+ error[invalid-return-type] rotkehlchen/chain/ethereum/modules/yearn/decoder.py:412:13: Return type does not match returned value: expected `dict[Unknown, str]`, found `dict[Unknown, Literal["yearn-v1", "yearn-v2"]]`
```

The code in question looks like
```py
    def addresses_to_counterparties(self) -> dict[ChecksumEvmAddress, str]:
        return dict.fromkeys(self.vaults, CPT_BEEFY_FINANCE)
```
where `CPT_BEEFY_FINANCE: Final = 'beefy_finance'. We previously
inferred the value type of the returned `dict` as `Unknown`, and now we
infer it as `Literal["beefy_finance"]`, which does not match the
annotated return type because `dict` is invariant in the value type.

```diff
+ error[invalid-argument-type] rotkehlchen/tests/unit/decoders/test_curve.py:249:9: Argument is incorrect: Expected `int`, found `FVal`
```
There are true positives that were previously silenced through the
`Unknown`.

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests
2025-07-07 13:16:40 +02:00
Ivan Yakushev e0b7f496f2
[ty] Support declaration-only attributes (#19048)
## Summary

Following ty issue [#698](https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/698)
this PR adds support for declarations.

closes #698

## Test Plan

Tested against mdtest (specifically attributes).

---------

Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
2025-07-07 12:55:32 +02:00
Alex Waygood 08d8819c8a
[ty] Fix descriptor lookups for most types that overlap with `None` (#19120) 2025-07-05 19:34:23 +01:00
Abhijeet Prasad Bodas f4bd74ab6a
[ty] Correctly handle calls to functions marked as returning `Never` / `NoReturn` (#18333)
## Summary

`ty` does not understand that calls to functions which have been
annotated as having a return type of `Never` / `NoReturn` are terminal.

This PR fixes that, by adding new reachability constraints when call
expressions are seen. If the call expression evaluates to `Never`, the
code following it will be considered to be unreachable. Note that, for
adding these constraints, we only consider call expressions at the
statement level, and that too only inside function scopes. This is
because otherwise, the number of such constraints becomes too high, and
evaluating them later on during type inference results in a major
performance degradation.

Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/180

## Test Plan

New mdtests.

## Ecosystem changes

This PR removes the following false-positives:
- "Function can implicitly return `None`, which is not assignable to
...".
- "Name `foo` used when possibly not defind" - because the branch in
which it is not defined has a `NoReturn` call, or when `foo` was
imported in a `try`, and the except had a `NoReturn` call.

---------

Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
2025-07-04 11:52:52 -07:00
Carl Meyer 411cccb35e
[ty] detect cycles in Type::is_disjoint_from (#19139) 2025-07-04 06:31:44 -07:00
Carl Meyer 7712c2fd15
[ty] don't allow first-party code to shadow stdlib types module (#19128) 2025-07-04 10:36:26 +00:00
David Peter e212dc2e8e
[ty] Restructure/move dataclass tests (#19117)
Before I'm adding even more dataclass-related files, let's organize them
in a separate folder.
2025-07-03 10:36:14 +00:00
Matthew Mckee 352b896c89
[ty] Add subtyping between SubclassOf and CallableType (#19026)
## Summary

Part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/129

There were previously some false positives here.

## Test Plan

Updated `is_subtype_of.md` and `is_assignable_to.md`
2025-07-02 19:22:31 -07:00
David Peter f76d3f87cf
[ty] Allow declared-only class-level attributes to be accessed on the class (#19071)
## Summary

Allow declared-only class-level attributes to be accessed on the class:
```py
class C:
    attr: int

C.attr  # this is now allowed
``` 

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/384
closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/553

## Ecosystem analysis


* We see many removed `unresolved-attribute` false-positives for code
that makes use of sqlalchemy, as expected (see changes for `prefect`)
* We see many removed `call-non-callable` false-positives for uses of
`pytest.skip` and similar, as expected
* Most new diagnostics seem to be related to cases like the following,
where we previously inferred `int` for `Derived().x`, but now we infer
`int | None`. I think this should be a
conflicting-declarations/bad-override error anyway? The new behavior may
even be preferred here?
  ```py
  class Base:
      x: int | None
  
  
  class Derived(Base):
      def __init__(self):
          self.x: int = 1
  ```
2025-07-02 18:03:56 +02:00
David Peter 93413d3631
[ty] Update docs links (#19092)
Point everything to the new documentation at https://docs.astral.sh/ty/
2025-07-02 17:34:56 +02:00
David Peter dac4e356eb
[ty] Use all reachable bindings for instance attributes and deferred lookups (#18955)
## Summary

Remove a hack in control flow modeling that was treating `return`
statements at the end of function bodies in a special way (basically
considering the state *just before* the `return` statement as the
end-of-scope state). This is not needed anymore now that #18750 has been
merged.

In order to make this work, we now use *all reachable bindings* for
purposes of finding implicit instance attribute assignments as well as
for deferred lookups of symbols. Both would otherwise be affected by
this change:
```py
def C:
    def f(self):
        self.x = 1  # a reachable binding that is not visible at the end of the scope
        return
```

```py
def f():
    class X: ...  # a reachable binding that is not visible at the end of the scope
    x: "X" = X()  # deferred use of `X`
    return
```

Implicit instance attributes also required another change. We previously
kept track of possibly-unbound instance attributes in some cases, but we
now give up on that completely and always consider *implicit* instance
attributes to be bound if we see a reachable binding in a reachable
method. The previous behavior was somewhat inconsistent anyway because
we also do not consider attributes possibly-unbound in other scenarios:
we do not (and can not) keep track of whether or not methods are called
that define these attributes.

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/711

## Ecosystem analysis

I think this looks very positive!

* We see an unsurprising drop in `possibly-unbound-attribute`
diagnostics (599), mostly for classes that define attributes in `try …
except` blocks, `for` loops, or `if … else: raise …` constructs. There
might obviously also be true positives that got removed, but the vast
majority should be false positives.
* There is also a drop in `possibly-unresolved-reference` /
`unresolved-reference` diagnostics (279+13) from the change to deferred
lookups.
* Some `invalid-type-form` false positives got resolved (13), because we
can now properly look up the names in the annotations.
* There are some new *true* positives in `attrs`, since we understand
the `Attribute` annotation that was previously inferred as `Unknown`
because of a re-assignment after the class definition.


## Test Plan

The existing attributes.md test suite has sufficient coverage here.
2025-07-01 14:38:36 +02:00
Alex Waygood ebf59e2bef
[ty] Rework disjointness of protocol instances vs types with possibly unbound attributes (#19043) 2025-07-01 12:47:27 +01:00
David Peter 7d468ee58a
[ty] Model reachability of star import definitions for nonlocal lookups (#19066)
## Summary

Temporarily modify `UseDefMapBuilder::reachability` for star imports in
order for new definitions to pick up the right reachability. This was
already working for `UseDefMapBuilder::place_states`, but not for
`UseDefMapBuilder::reachable_definitions`.

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/728

## Test Plan

Regression test
2025-07-01 11:06:37 +02:00
Carl Meyer 2ae0bd9464
[ty] Normalize recursive types using Any (#19003)
## Summary

This just replaces one temporary solution to recursive protocols (the
`SelfReference` mechanism) with another one (track seen types when
recursively descending in `normalize` and replace recursive references
with `Any`). But this temporary solution can handle mutually-recursive
types, not just self-referential ones, and it's sufficient for the
primer ecosystem and some other projects we are testing on to no longer
stack overflow.

The follow-up here will be to properly handle these self-references
instead of replacing them with `Any`.

We will also eventually need cycle detection on more recursive-descent
type transformations and tests.

## Test Plan

Existing tests (including recursive-protocol tests) and primer.

Added mdtest for mutually-recursive protocols that stack-overflowed
before this PR.
2025-06-30 12:07:57 -07:00
David Peter db3dcd8ad6
[ty] Eagerly simplify 'True' and 'False' constraints (#18998)
## Summary

Simplifies literal `True` and `False` conditions to `ALWAYS_TRUE` /
`ALWAYS_FALSE` during semantic index building. This allows us to eagerly
evaluate more constraints, which should help with performance (looks
like there is a tiny 1% improvement in instrumented benchmarks), but
also allows us to eliminate definitely-unreachable branches in
control-flow merging. This can lead to better type inference in some
cases because it allows us to retain narrowing constraints without
solving https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/690 first:
```py
def _(c: int | None):
    if c is None:
        assert False
    
    reveal_type(c)  # int, previously: int | None
```

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/713

## Test Plan

* Regression test for https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/713
* Made sure that all ecosystem diffs trace back to removed false
positives
2025-06-30 13:11:52 +02:00
med1844 0ec2ad2fa5
[ty] Emit error for invalid binary operations in type expressions (#18991)
## Summary

This PR adds diagnostic for invalid binary operators in type
expressions. It should close https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/706
if merged.

Please feel free to suggest better wordings for the diagnostic message.

## Test Plan

I modified `mdtest/annotations/invalid.md` and added a test for each
binary operator, and fixed tests that was broken by the new diagnostic.
2025-06-30 10:06:01 +02:00
InSync e7aadfc28b
[ty] Add special-cased inference for `__import__(name)` and `importlib.import_module(name)` (#19008) 2025-06-29 11:49:23 +01:00
Shunsuke Shibayama de1f8177be
[ty] Improve protocol member type checking and relation handling (#18847)
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2025-06-29 10:46:33 +00:00
Douglas Creager c60e590b4c
[ty] Support variable-length tuples in unpacking assignments (#18948)
This PR updates our unpacking assignment logic to use the new tuple
machinery. As a result, we can now unpack variable-length tuples
correctly.

As part of this, the `TupleSpec` classes have been renamed to `Tuple`,
and can now contain any element (Rust) type, not just `Type<'db>`. The
unpacker uses a tuple of `UnionBuilder`s to maintain the types that will
be assigned to each target, as we iterate through potentially many union
elements on the rhs. We also add a new consuming iterator for tuples,
and update the `all_elements` methods to wrap the result in an enum
(similar to `itertools::Position`) letting you know which part of the
tuple each element appears in. I also added a new
`UnionBuilder::try_build`, which lets you specify a different fallback
type if the union contains no elements.
2025-06-27 15:29:04 -04:00
Alex Waygood a50a993b9c
[ty] Make tuple instantiations sound (#18987)
## Summary

Ensure that we correctly infer calls such as `tuple((1, 2))`,
`tuple(range(42))`, etc. Ensure that we emit errors on invalid calls
such as `tuple[int, str]()`.

## Test Plan

Mdtests
2025-06-27 19:37:16 +01:00
Matthew Mckee a3c79d8170
[ty] Don't add incorrect subdiagnostic for unresolved reference (#18487)
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-06-27 12:40:33 +00:00
David Peter 86fd9b634e
[ty] Format conflicting types as an enumeration (#18956)
## Summary

Format conflicting declared types as
```
`str`, `int` and `bytes`
```

Thanks to @AlexWaygood for the initial draft.

@dcreager, looking forward to your one-character follow-up PR.
2025-06-26 14:29:33 +02:00
David Peter b01003f81d
[ty] Infer nonlocal types as unions of all reachable bindings (#18750)
## Summary

This PR includes a behavioral change to how we infer types for public
uses of symbols within a module. Where we would previously use the type
that a use at the end of the scope would see, we now consider all
reachable bindings and union the results:

```py
x = None

def f():
    reveal_type(x)  # previously `Unknown | Literal[1]`, now `Unknown | None | Literal[1]`

f()

x = 1

f()
```

This helps especially in cases where the the end of the scope is not
reachable:

```py
def outer(x: int):
    def inner():
        reveal_type(x)  # previously `Unknown`, now `int`

    raise ValueError
```

This PR also proposes to skip the boundness analysis of public uses.
This is consistent with the "all reachable bindings" strategy, because
the implicit `x = <unbound>` binding is also always reachable, and we
would have to emit "possibly-unresolved" diagnostics for every public
use otherwise. Changing this behavior allows common use-cases like the
following to type check without any errors:

```py
def outer(flag: bool):
    if flag:
        x = 1

        def inner():
            print(x)  # previously: possibly-unresolved-reference, now: no error
```

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/210
closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/607
closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/699

## Follow up

It is now possible to resolve the following TODO, but I would like to do
that as a follow-up, because it requires some changes to how we treat
implicit attribute assignments, which could result in ecosystem changes
that I'd like to see separately.


315fb0f3da/crates/ty_python_semantic/src/semantic_index/builder.rs (L1095-L1117)

## Ecosystem analysis

[**Full report**](https://shark.fish/diff-public-types.html)

* This change obviously removes a lot of `possibly-unresolved-reference`
diagnostics (7818) because we do not analyze boundness for public uses
of symbols inside modules anymore.
* As the primary goal here, this change also removes a lot of
false-positive `unresolved-reference` diagnostics (231) in scenarios
like this:
    ```py
    def _(flag: bool):
        if flag:
            x = 1
    
            def inner():
                x
    
            raise
    ```
* This change also introduces some new false positives for cases like:
    ```py
    def _():
        x = None
    
        x = "test"
    
        def inner():
x.upper() # Attribute `upper` on type `Unknown | None | Literal["test"]`
is possibly unbound
    ```
We have test cases for these situations and it's plausible that we can
improve this in a follow-up.


## Test Plan

New Markdown tests
2025-06-26 12:24:40 +02:00
Alex Waygood c77e72ea1a
[ty] Add subdiagnostic about empty bodies in more cases (#18942) 2025-06-25 20:25:00 +01:00
David Peter 689797a984
[ty] Type narrowing in comprehensions (#18934)
## Summary

Add type narrowing inside comprehensions:

```py
def _(xs: list[int | None]):
    [reveal_type(x) for x in xs if x is not None]  # revealed: int
```

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/680

## Test Plan

* New Markdown tests
* Made sure the example from https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/680
now checks without errors
* Made sure that all removed ecosystem diagnostics were actually false
positives
2025-06-25 11:30:28 +02:00
Carl Meyer 62975b3ab2
[ty] eliminate is_fully_static (#18799)
## Summary

Having a recursive type method to check whether a type is fully static
is inefficient, unnecessary, and makes us overly strict about subtyping
relations.

It's inefficient because we end up re-walking the same types many times
to check for fully-static-ness.

It's unnecessary because we can check relations involving the dynamic
type appropriately, depending whether the relation is subtyping or
assignability.

We use the subtyping relation to simplify unions and intersections. We
can usefully consider that `S <: T` for gradual types also, as long as
it remains true that `S | T` is equivalent to `T` and `S & T` is
equivalent to `S`.

One conservative definition (implemented here) that satisfies this
requirement is that we consider `S <: T` if, for every possible pair of
materializations `S'` and `T'`, `S' <: T'`. Or put differently the top
materialization of `S` (`S+` -- the union of all possible
materializations of `S`) is a subtype of the bottom materialization of
`T` (`T-` -- the intersection of all possible materializations of `T`).
In the most basic cases we can usefully say that `Any <: object` and
that `Never <: Any`, and we can handle more complex cases inductively
from there.

This definition of subtyping for gradual subtypes is not reflexive
(`Any` is not a subtype of `Any`).

As a corollary, we also remove `is_gradual_equivalent_to` --
`is_equivalent_to` now has the meaning that `is_gradual_equivalent_to`
used to have. If necessary, we could restore an
`is_fully_static_equivalent_to` or similar (which would not do an
`is_fully_static` pre-check of the types, but would instead pass a
relation-kind enum down through a recursive equivalence check, similar
to `has_relation_to`), but so far this doesn't appear to be necessary.

Credit to @JelleZijlstra for the observation that `is_fully_static` is
unnecessary and overly restrictive on subtyping.

There is another possible definition of gradual subtyping: instead of
requiring that `S+ <: T-`, we could instead require that `S+ <: T+` and
`S- <: T-`. In other words, instead of requiring all materializations of
`S` to be a subtype of every materialization of `T`, we just require
that every materialization of `S` be a subtype of _some_ materialization
of `T`, and that every materialization of `T` be a supertype of some
materialization of `S`. This definition also preserves the core
invariant that `S <: T` implies that `S | T = T` and `S & T = S`, and it
restores reflexivity: under this definition, `Any` is a subtype of
`Any`, and for any equivalent types `S` and `T`, `S <: T` and `T <: S`.
But unfortunately, this definition breaks transitivity of subtyping,
because nominal subclasses in Python use assignability ("consistent
subtyping") to define acceptable overrides. This means that we may have
a class `A` with `def method(self) -> Any` and a subtype `B(A)` with
`def method(self) -> int`, since `int` is assignable to `Any`. This
means that if we have a protocol `P` with `def method(self) -> Any`, we
would have `B <: A` (from nominal subtyping) and `A <: P` (`Any` is a
subtype of `Any`), but not `B <: P` (`int` is not a subtype of `Any`).
Breaking transitivity of subtyping is not tenable, so we don't use this
definition of subtyping.

## Test Plan

Existing tests (modified in some cases to account for updated
semantics.)

Stable property tests pass at a million iterations:
`QUICKCHECK_TESTS=1000000 cargo test -p ty_python_semantic -- --ignored
types::property_tests::stable`

### Changes to property test type generation

Since we no longer have a method of categorizing built types as
fully-static or not-fully-static, I had to add a previously-discussed
feature to the property tests so that some tests can build types that
are known by construction to be fully static, because there are still
properties that only apply to fully-static types (for example,
reflexiveness of subtyping.)

## Changes to handling of `*args, **kwargs` signatures

This PR "discovered" that, once we allow non-fully-static types to
participate in subtyping under the above definitions, `(*args: Any,
**kwargs: Any) -> Any` is now a subtype of `() -> object`. This is true,
if we take a literal interpretation of the former signature: all
materializations of the parameters `*args: Any, **kwargs: Any` can
accept zero arguments, making the former signature a subtype of the
latter. But the spec actually says that `*args: Any, **kwargs: Any`
should be interpreted as equivalent to `...`, and that makes a
difference here: `(...) -> Any` is not a subtype of `() -> object`,
because (unlike a literal reading of `(*args: Any, **kwargs: Any)`),
`...` can materialize to _any_ signature, including a signature with
required positional arguments.

This matters for this PR because it makes the "any two types are both
assignable to their union" property test fail if we don't implement the
equivalence to `...`. Because `FunctionType.__call__` has the signature
`(*args: Any, **kwargs: Any) -> Any`, and if we take that at face value
it's a subtype of `() -> object`, making `FunctionType` a subtype of `()
-> object)` -- but then a function with a required argument is also a
subtype of `FunctionType`, but not a subtype of `() -> object`. So I
went ahead and implemented the equivalence to `...` in this PR.

## Ecosystem analysis

* Most of the ecosystem report are cases of improved union/intersection
simplification. For example, we can now simplify a union like `bool |
(bool & Unknown) | Unknown` to simply `bool | Unknown`, because we can
now observe that every possible materialization of `bool & Unknown` is
still a subtype of `bool` (whereas before we would set aside `bool &
Unknown` as a not-fully-static type.) This is clearly an improvement.
* The `possibly-unresolved-reference` errors in sockeye, pymongo,
ignite, scrapy and others are true positives for conditional imports
that were formerly silenced by bogus conflicting-declarations (which we
currently don't issue a diagnostic for), because we considered two
different declarations of `Unknown` to be conflicting (we used
`is_equivalent_to` not `is_gradual_equivalent_to`). In this PR that
distinction disappears and all equivalence is gradual, so a declaration
of `Unknown` no longer conflicts with a declaration of `Unknown`, which
then results in us surfacing the possibly-unbound error.
* We will now issue "redundant cast" for casting from a typevar with a
gradual bound to the same typevar (the hydra-zen diagnostic). This seems
like an improvement.
* The new diagnostics in bandersnatch are interesting. For some reason
primer in CI seems to be checking bandersnatch on Python 3.10 (not yet
sure why; this doesn't happen when I run it locally). But bandersnatch
uses `enum.StrEnum`, which doesn't exist on 3.10. That makes the `class
SimpleDigest(StrEnum)` a class that inherits from `Unknown` (and
bypasses our current TODO handling for accessing attributes on enum
classes, since we don't recognize it as an enum class at all). This PR
improves our understanding of assignability to classes that inherit from
`Any` / `Unknown`, and we now recognize that a string literal is not
assignable to a class inheriting `Any` or `Unknown`.
2025-06-24 18:02:05 -07:00
Douglas Creager 66f50fb04b
[ty] Add property test generators for variable-length tuples (#18901)
Add property test generators for the new variable-length tuples. This
covers homogeneous tuples as well.

The property tests did their job! This identified several fixes we
needed to make to various type property methods.

cf https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/18600#issuecomment-2993764471

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-06-24 18:13:47 -04:00
Alex Waygood 9d8cba4e8b
[ty] Improve disjointness inference for `NominalInstanceType`s and `SubclassOfType`s (#18864)
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-06-24 20:27:37 +00:00
Alex Waygood e44c489273
[ty] Fix false positives when subscripting an object inferred as having an `Intersection` type (#18920) 2025-06-24 18:39:02 +00:00
Alex Waygood 27eee5a1a8
[ty] Support narrowing on `isinstance()`/`issubclass()` if the second argument is a dynamic, intersection, union or typevar type (#18900) 2025-06-24 10:55:26 +00:00
med1844 fd2cc37f90
[ty] Add decorator check for implicit attribute assignments (#18587)
## Summary

Previously, the checks for implicit attribute assignments didn't
properly account for method decorators. This PR fixes that by:

- Adding a decorator check in `implicit_instance_attribute`. This allows
it to filter out methods with mismatching decorators when analyzing
attribute assignments.
- Adding attribute search for implicit class attributes: if an attribute
can't be found directly in the class body, the
`ClassLiteral::own_class_member` function will now search in
classmethods.
- Adding `staticmethod`: it has been added into `KnownClass` and
together with the new decorator check, it will no longer expose
attributes when the assignment target name is the same as the first
method name.

If accepted, it should fix https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/205
and https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/207.

## Test Plan

This is tested with existing mdtest suites and is able to get most of
the TODO marks for implicit assignments in classmethods and
staticmethods removed.

However, there's one specific test case I failed to figure out how to
correctly resolve:


b279508bdc/crates/ty_python_semantic/resources/mdtest/attributes.md?plain=1#L754-L755

I tried to add `instance_member().is_unbound()` check in this [else
branch](b279508bdc/crates/ty_python_semantic/src/types/infer.rs (L3299-L3301))
but it causes tests with class attributes defined in class body to fail.
While it's possible to implicitly add `ClassVar` to qualifiers to make
this assignment fail and keep everything else passing, it doesn't feel
like the right solution.
2025-06-24 11:42:10 +02:00
Dhruv Manilawala e474f36473
[ty] Avoid duplicate diagnostic in unpacking (#18897)
## Summary

This PR fixes astral-sh/ty#185 by avoiding to infer the value expression
for an unpacking.

This is done simply by only inferring the value expression in a
non-unpacking branch for assignment statement, for statement, with
statement and comprehensions.

This is a simpler alternative to
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/18890 which I only realized in
hindsight! Ideally, the solution would to consider the "unpack" as it's
own region and do all of the inference of every expressions involved in
an unpacking inside the unpack query and then merge the results in the
outer query. This would require access to the `Unpack` ingredient which
is stored on the `Definition`. And, this would require create the said
`Definition`s for all attributes and subscript expressions. It does
simplify the target inference logic by streamlining it into a single
`infer_target` method instead of the `infer_target`/`infer_target_impl`
split.

Additionally, #18890 also solves a couple of TODOs around raising errors
around attribute / subscript assignment.

## Test Plan

Update the existing test, go through a couple of ecosystem diagnostic.
2025-06-24 07:49:44 +05:30
Suneet Tipirneni ef8281b695
[ty] add support for mapped union and intersection subscript loads (#18846)
## Summary

Note this modifies the diagnostics a bit. Previously performing
subscript access on something like `NotSubscriptable1 |
NotSubscriptable2` would report the full type as not being
subscriptable:

```
[non-subscriptable] "Cannot subscript object of type `NotSubscriptable1 | NotSubscriptable2` with no `__getitem__` method"
```

Now each erroneous constituent has a separate error:

```
[non-subscriptable] "Cannot subscript object of type `NotSubscriptable2` with no `__getitem__` method"
[non-subscriptable] "Cannot subscript object of type `NotSubscriptable1` with no `__getitem__` method"
```

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/625

## Test Plan

 mdtest

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-06-23 16:38:01 +00:00
David Peter 21303d1a02
[ty] Minor change to builtins.md test (#18889)
## Summary

As far as I can tell, the two existing tests did the exact same thing.
Remove the redundant test, and add tests for all combinations of
declared/not-declared and local/"public" use of the name.

Proposing this as a separate PR before the behavior might change via
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/18750
2025-06-23 12:32:50 +02:00
Carl Meyer 089f5152f6
[ty] Fix mixed tuple subtyping (#18852)
## Summary

The code in the `Variable` branch of
`VariableLengthTupleSpec::has_relation_to` made the incorrect assumption
that if you zip two possibly-different-length iterators together and
iterate over the resulting zip iterator, the original two iterators will
only have their common elements consumed. But in fact, the zip iterator
detects that it is done when it receives a `None` from one iterator and
`Some()` element from the other iterator, which means that it consumes
one additional element from the longer iterator. This meant that we
failed to detect mismatched types on this extra consumed element,
because we never compared it to the variable type of the other tuple.

Use `zip_longest` from itertools as an alternative, which allows us to
combine all the handling into just two `zip_longest`, one for prefixes
and one for suffixes.

Marking this PR internal since it fixes a bug in a commit that wasn't
released yet.

## Test Plan

Added mdtests that failed before this fix and pass after it.
2025-06-21 13:09:23 -07:00
Douglas Creager ea812d0813
[ty] Homogeneous and mixed tuples (#18600)
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>
2025-06-20 18:23:54 -04:00
Alex Waygood dc160c4a49
[ty] Fix panics when pulling types for `ClassVar` or `Final` parameterized with >1 argument (#18824) 2025-06-20 18:06:40 +01:00
med1844 7982edac90
[ty] Add support for `@staticmethod`s (#18809)
## Summary

Add support for `@staticmethod`s. Overall, the changes are very similar
to #16305.

#18587 will be dependent on this PR for a potential fix of
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/207.

mypy_primer will look bad since the new code allows ty to check more
code.

## Test Plan

Added new markdown tests. Please comment if there's any missing tests
that I should add in, thank you.
2025-06-20 10:38:17 +02:00