Commit Graph

430 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Shunsuke Shibayama 348c196cb3
[red-knot] avoid inferring types if unpacking fails (#16530)
## Summary

This PR closes #15199.

The change I just made is to set all variables to type `Unknown` if
unpacking fails, but in some cases this may be excessive.
For example:

```py
a, b, c = "ab"
reveal_type(a)  # Unknown, but it would be reasonable to think of it as LiteralString
reveal_type(c)  # Unknown
```

```py
# Failed to unpack before the starred expression
(a, b, *c, d, e) = (1,)
reveal_type(a)  # Unknown
reveal_type(b)  # Unknown
...
# Failed to unpack after the starred expression
(a, b, *c, d, e) = (1, 2, 3)
reveal_type(a)  # Unknown, but should it be Literal[1]?
reveal_type(b)  # Unknown, but should it be Literal[2]?
reveal_type(c)  # Todo
reveal_type(d)  # Unknown
reveal_type(e)  # Unknown
```

I will modify it if you think it would be better to make it a different
type than just `Unknown`.

## Test Plan

I have made appropriate modifications to the test cases affected by this
change, and also added some more test cases.
2025-03-07 11:04:44 -08:00
David Peter 0a627ef216
[red-knot] Never is callable and iterable. Arbitrary attributes can be accessed. (#16533)
## Summary

- `Never` is callable
- `Never` is iterable
- Arbitrary attributes can be accessed on `Never`

Split out from #16416 that is going to be required.

## Test Plan

Tests for all properties above.
2025-03-06 15:59:19 +00:00
Micha Reiser ce0018c3cb
Add `OsSystem` support to mdtests (#16518)
## Summary

This PR introduces a new mdtest option `system` that can either be
`in-memory` or `os`
where `in-memory` is the default.

The motivation for supporting `os` is so that we can write OS/system
specific tests
with mdtests. Specifically, I want to write mdtests for the module
resolver,
testing that module resolution is case sensitive. 

## Test Plan

I tested that the case-sensitive module resolver test start failing when
setting `system = "os"`
2025-03-06 10:41:40 +01:00
Micha Reiser 48f906e06c
Add tests for case-sensitive module resolution (#16517)
## Summary

Python's module resolver is case sensitive. 

This PR adds mdtests that assert that our module resolution is case
sensitive.

The tests currently all pass because our in memory file system is case
sensitive.
I'll add support for using the real file system to the mdtest framework
in a separate PR.

This PR also adds support for specifying extra search paths to the
mdtest framework.

## Test Plan
The tests fail when running them using the real file system.
2025-03-06 10:19:23 +01:00
Douglas Creager ebd172e732
[red-knot] Several failing tests for generics (#16509)
To kick off the work of supporting generics, this adds many new
(currently failing) tests, showing the behavior we plan to support.

This is still missing a lot!  Not included:

- typevar tuples
- param specs
- variance
- `Self`

But it's a good start! We can add more failing tests for those once we
tackle these.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-03-05 17:21:19 -05:00
Shunsuke Shibayama bb44926ca5
[red-knot] Add rule `invalid-type-checking-constant` (#16501)
## Summary

This PR adds more features to #16468.

* Adds a new error rule `invalid-type-checking-constant`, which occurs
when we try to assign a value other than `False` to a user-defined
`TYPE_CHECKING` variable (it is possible to assign `...` in a stub
file).
* Allows annotated assignment to `TYPE_CHECKING`. Only types that
`False` can be assigned to are allowed. However, the type of
`TYPE_CHECKING` will be inferred to be `Literal[True]` regardless of
what the type is specified.

## Test plan

I ran the tests with `cargo test -p red_knot_python_semantic` and
confirmed that all tests passed.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-03-04 19:49:34 +00:00
Shunsuke Shibayama 1977dda079
[red-knot] respect `TYPE_CHECKING` even if not imported from typing (#16468)
## Summary

This PR closes #15722.

The change is that if the variable `TYPE_CHECKING` is defined/imported,
the type of the variable is interpreted as `Literal[True]` regardless of
what the value is.
This is compatible with the behavior of other type checkers (e.g. mypy,
pyright).

## Test Plan

I ran the tests with `cargo test -p red_knot_python_semantic` and
confirmed that all tests passed.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-03-04 07:58:29 -08:00
Mike Perlov fdf0915283
[red-knot] treat annotated assignments without RHS in stubs as bindings (#16409) 2025-02-28 16:45:21 +00:00
Alex Waygood 09d0b227fb
[red-knot] Disallow more invalid type expressions (#16427) 2025-02-28 10:04:30 +00:00
Carl Meyer 87d011e1bd
[red-knot] fix non-callable reporting for unions (#16387)
Minor follow-up to https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/16161

This `not_callable` flag wasn't functional, because it could never be
`false`. It was initialized to `true` and then only ever updated with
`|=`, which can never make it `false`.

Add a test that exercises the case where it _should_ be `false` (all of
the union elements are callable) but `bindings` is also empty (all union
elements have binding errors). Before this PR, the added test wrongly
emits a diagnostic that the union `Literal[f1] | Literal[f2]` is not
callable.

And add a test where a union call results in one binding error and one
not-callable error, where we currently give the wrong result (we show
only the binding error), with a TODO.

Also add TODO comments in a couple other tests where ideally we'd report
more than just one error out of a union call.

Also update the flag name to `all_errors_not_callable` to more clearly
indicate the semantics of the flag.
2025-02-26 07:06:04 -08:00
David Peter 86b01d2d3c
[red-knot] Correct modeling of dunder calls (#16368)
## Summary

Model dunder-calls correctly (and in one single place), by implementing
this behavior (using `__getitem__` as an example).

```py
def getitem_desugared(obj: object, key: object) -> object:
    getitem_callable = find_in_mro(type(obj), "__getitem__")
    if hasattr(getitem_callable, "__get__"):
        getitem_callable = getitem_callable.__get__(obj, type(obj))

    return getitem_callable(key)
```

See the new `calls/dunder.md` test suite for more information. The new
behavior also needs much fewer lines of code (the diff is positive due
to new tests).

## Test Plan

New tests; fix TODOs in existing tests.
2025-02-25 20:38:15 +01:00
David Peter f88328eedd
[red-knot] Handle possibly-unbound instance members (#16363)
## Summary

Adds support for possibly-unbound/undeclared instance members.

## Test Plan

New MD tests.
2025-02-25 20:00:38 +01:00
Alex Waygood 5c007db7e2
[red-knot] Rewrite `Type::try_iterate()` to improve type inference and diagnostic messages (#16321) 2025-02-25 14:02:03 +00:00
David Peter aac79e453a
[red-knot] Better diagnostics for method calls (#16362)
## Summary

Add better error messages and additional spans for method calls. Can be
reviewed commit-by-commit.

before:

```
error: lint:invalid-argument-type
 --> /home/shark/playground/test.py:6:10
  |
5 | c = C()
6 | c.square("hello")  # error: [invalid-argument-type]
  |          ^^^^^^^ Object of type `Literal["hello"]` cannot be assigned to parameter 2 (`x`); expected type `int`
7 |
8 | # import inspect
  |
```

after:

```
error: lint:invalid-argument-type
 --> /home/shark/playground/test.py:6:10
  |
5 | c = C()
6 | c.square("hello")  # error: [invalid-argument-type]
  |          ^^^^^^^ Object of type `Literal["hello"]` cannot be assigned to parameter 2 (`x`) of bound method `square`; expected type `int`
7 |
8 | # import inspect
  |
 ::: /home/shark/playground/test.py:2:22
  |
1 | class C:
2 |     def square(self, x: int) -> int:
  |                      ------ info: parameter declared in function definition here
3 |         return x * x
  |
```

## Test Plan

New snapshot test
2025-02-25 09:58:08 +01:00
Mike Perlov 68991d09a8
[red-knot] Add diagnostic for class-object access to pure instance variables (#16036)
## Summary

Add a diagnostic if a pure instance variable is accessed on a class object. For example

```py
class C:
    instance_only: str

    def __init__(self):
        self.instance_only = "a"

# error: Attribute `instance_only` can only be accessed on instances, not on the class object `Literal[C]` itself.
C.instance_only
```


---------

Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
2025-02-24 15:17:16 +01:00
David Peter 141ba253da
[red-knot] Add support for `@classmethod`s (#16305)
## Summary

Add support for `@classmethod`s.

```py
class C:
    @classmethod
    def f(cls, x: int) -> str:
        return "a"

reveal_type(C.f(1))  # revealed: str
```

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests
2025-02-24 09:55:34 +01:00
Alex Waygood 64effa4aea
[red-knot] Add a regression test for recent improvement to `TypeInferenceBuilder::infer_name_load()` (#16310) 2025-02-21 22:28:42 +00:00
Alex Waygood 224a36f5f3
Teach red-knot that `type(x)` is the same as `x.__class__` (#16301) 2025-02-21 21:05:48 +00:00
Alex Waygood 5347abc766
[red-knot] Generalise special-casing for `KnownClass`es in `Type::bool` (#16300) 2025-02-21 20:46:36 +00:00
Micha Reiser 5fab97f1ef
[red-knot] Diagnostics for incorrect `bool` usages (#16238) 2025-02-21 19:26:05 +01:00
David Peter 3aa7ba31b1
[red-knot] Fix descriptor `__get__` call on class objects (#16304)
## Summary

I spotted a minor mistake in my descriptor protocol implementation where
`C.descriptor` would pass the meta type (`type`) of the type of `C`
(`Literal[C]`) as the owner argument to `__get__`, instead of passing
`Literal[C]` directly.

## Test Plan

New test.
2025-02-21 15:35:41 +01:00
David Peter d2e034adcd
[red-knot] Method calls and the descriptor protocol (#16121)
## Summary

This PR achieves the following:

* Add support for checking method calls, and inferring return types from
method calls. For example:
  ```py
  reveal_type("abcde".find("abc"))  # revealed: int
  reveal_type("foo".encode(encoding="utf-8"))  # revealed: bytes
  
  "abcde".find(123)  # error: [invalid-argument-type]
  
  class C:
      def f(self) -> int:
          pass
  
  reveal_type(C.f)  # revealed: <function `f`>
  reveal_type(C().f)  # revealed: <bound method: `f` of `C`>
  
  C.f()  # error: [missing-argument]
  reveal_type(C().f())  # revealed: int
  ```
* Implement the descriptor protocol, i.e. properly call the `__get__`
method when a descriptor object is accessed through a class object or an
instance of a class. For example:
  ```py
  from typing import Literal
  
  class Ten:
def __get__(self, instance: object, owner: type | None = None) ->
Literal[10]:
          return 10
  
  class C:
      ten: Ten = Ten()
  
  reveal_type(C.ten)  # revealed: Literal[10]
  reveal_type(C().ten)  # revealed: Literal[10]
  ```
* Add support for member lookup on intersection types.
* Support type inference for `inspect.getattr_static(obj, attr)` calls.
This was mostly used as a debugging tool during development, but seems
more generally useful. It can be used to bypass the descriptor protocol.
For the example above:
  ```py
  from inspect import getattr_static
  
  reveal_type(getattr_static(C, "ten"))  # revealed: Ten
  ```
* Add a new `Type::Callable(…)` variant with the following sub-variants:
* `Type::Callable(CallableType::BoundMethod(…))` — represents bound
method objects, e.g. `C().f` above
* `Type::Callable(CallableType::MethodWrapperDunderGet(…))` — represents
`f.__get__` where `f` is a function
* `Type::Callable(WrapperDescriptorDunderGet)` — represents
`FunctionType.__get__`
* Add new known classes:
  * `types.MethodType`
  * `types.MethodWrapperType`
  * `types.WrapperDescriptorType`
  * `builtins.range`

## Performance analysis

On this branch, we do more work. We need to do more call checking, since
we now check all method calls. We also need to do ~twice as many member
lookups, because we need to check if a `__get__` attribute exists on
accessed members.

A brief analysis on `tomllib` shows that we now call `Type::call` 1780
times, compared to 612 calls before.

## Limitations

* Data descriptors are not yet supported, i.e. we do not infer correct
types for descriptor attribute accesses in `Store` context and do not
check writes to descriptor attributes. I felt like this was something
that could be split out as a follow-up without risking a major
architectural change.
* We currently distinguish between `Type::member` (with descriptor
protocol) and `Type::static_member` (without descriptor protocol). The
former corresponds to `obj.attr`, the latter corresponds to
`getattr_static(obj, "attr")`. However, to model some details correctly,
we would also need to distinguish between a static member lookup *with*
and *without* instance variables. The lookup without instance variables
corresponds to `find_name_in_mro`
[here](https://docs.python.org/3/howto/descriptor.html#invocation-from-an-instance).
We currently approximate both using `member_static`, which leads to two
open TODOs. Changing this would be a larger refactoring of
`Type::own_instance_member`, so I chose to leave it out of this PR.

## Test Plan

* New `call/methods.md` test suite for method calls
* New tests in `descriptor_protocol.md`
* New `call/getattr_static.md` test suite for `inspect.getattr_static`
* Various updated tests
2025-02-20 23:22:26 +01:00
David Peter 8198668fc3
[red-knot] MDTest: Use custom class names instead of builtins (#16269)
## Summary

Follow up on the discussion
[here](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/16121#discussion_r1962973298).
Replace builtin classes with custom placeholder names, which should
hopefully make the tests a bit easier to understand.

I carefully renamed things one after the other, to make sure that there
is no functional change in the tests.
2025-02-20 12:25:55 +00:00
Douglas Creager cfc6941d5c
[red-knot] Resolve references in eager nested scopes eagerly (#16079)
We now resolve references in "eager" scopes correctly — using the
bindings and declarations that are visible at the point where the eager
scope is created, not the "public" type of the symbol (typically the
bindings visible at the end of the scope).

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2025-02-19 10:22:30 -05:00
Andrew Gallant 3ea32e2cdd red_knot_python_semantic: improve diagnostic message for "invalid argument type"
This uses the refactoring and support for secondary diagnostic messages
to improve the diagnostic for "invalid argument type." The main
improvement here is that we show where the function being called is
defined, and annotate the span corresponding to the invalid parameter.
2025-02-19 08:24:19 -05:00
David Peter 877c1066d3
[red-knot] Update tests for attributes inferred from parameters (#16208)
## Summary

Update description and remove TODOs from out `attributes.md` test suite
to reflect our current intentions.

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/15960
2025-02-18 22:43:11 +01:00
Carl Meyer 00b022d472
[red-knot] update TODO comment in mdtest (#16242)
This comment gave wrong/misleading info about the reason for the wrong
output, just updating it to be correct to avoid confusing our future
selves.
2025-02-18 20:52:17 +00:00
Micha Reiser 4ed5db0d42
Refactor `CallOutcome` to `Result` (#16161) 2025-02-18 13:34:39 +01:00
Alex Waygood 4941975e74
[red-knot] Recognize `...` as a singleton (#16184) 2025-02-16 22:01:02 +00:00
Alex Waygood 93aff36147
[red-knot] Improve handling of inherited class attributes (#16160) 2025-02-15 18:22:35 +00:00
Carl Meyer dcabb948f3
[red-knot] add special case for float/complex (#16166)
When adjusting the existing tests, I aimed to avoid dealing with the
special case in other tests if it's not necessary to do so (that is,
avoid using `float` and `complex` as examples where we just need "some
type"), and keep the tests for the special case mostly collected in the
mdtest dedicated to that purpose.

Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/14932
2025-02-14 12:24:10 -08:00
Dhruv Manilawala 60b3ef2c98
[red-knot] Support re-export conventions for stub files (#16073)
This is an alternative implementation to #15848.

## Summary

This PR adds support for re-export conventions for imports for stub
files.

**How does this work?**
* Add a new flag on the `Import` and `ImportFrom` definitions to
indicate whether they're being exported or not
* Add a new enum to indicate whether the symbol lookup is happening
within the same file or is being queried from another file (e.g., an
import statement)
* When a `Symbol` is being queried, we'll skip the definitions that are
(a) coming from a stub file (b) external lookup and (c) check the
re-export flag on the definition

This implementation does not yet support `__all__` and `*` imports as
both are features that needs to be implemented independently.

closes: #14099
closes: #15476 

## Test Plan

Add test cases, update existing ones if required.
2025-02-14 15:17:51 +05:30
David Peter 366ae1feaa
[red-knot] Document 'public type of undeclared symbols' behavior (#16096)
## Summary

After I was asked twice within the same day, I thought it would be a
good idea to write some *user facing* documentation that explains our
reasoning behind inferring `Unknown | T_inferred` for public uses of
undeclared symbols. This is a major deviation from the behavior of other
type checkers and it seems like a good practice to defend our choice
like this.
2025-02-12 08:52:11 +01:00
David Peter 0019d39f6e
[red-knot] `T | object == object` (#16088)
## Summary

- Simplify unions with `object` to `object`.
- Add a new `Type::object(db)` constructor to abbreviate
`KnownClass::Object.to_instance(db)` in some places.
- Add a `Type::is_object` and `Class::is_object` function to make some
tests for a bit easier to read.

closes #16084

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests.
2025-02-10 23:07:06 +01:00
David Peter 97e6fc3793
[red-knot] Unpacking and for loop assignments to attributes (#16004)
## Summary

* Support assignments to attributes in more cases:
    - assignments in `for` loops
    - in unpacking assignments
* Add test for multi-target assignments
* Add tests for all other possible assignments to attributes that could
   possibly occur (in decreasing order of likeliness):
    - augmented attribute assignments
    - attribute assignments in `with` statements
    - attribute assignments in comprehensions
- Note: assignments to attributes in named expressions are not
   syntactically allowed

closes #15962

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests
2025-02-07 11:30:51 +01:00
Micha Reiser 38351e00ee
[red-knot] Partial revert of relative import handling for files in the root of a search path (#16001)
## Summary

This PR reverts the behavior changes from
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15990

But it isn't just a revert, it also:

* Adds a test covering this specific behavior
* Preserves the improvement to use `saturating_sub` in the package case
to avoid overflows in the case of invalid syntax
* Use `ancestors` instead of a `for` loop

## Test Plan

Added test
2025-02-07 11:04:09 +01:00
David Peter e345307260
[red-knot] Fix diagnostic range for non-iterable unpacking assignments (#15994)
## Summary

I noticed that the diagnostic range in specific unpacking assignments is
wrong. For this example

```py
a, b = 1
```

we previously got (see first commit):

```
error: lint:not-iterable
 --> /src/mdtest_snippet.py:1:1
  |
1 | a, b = 1
  | ^^^^ Object of type `Literal[1]` is not iterable
  |
```

and with this change, we get:

```
error: lint:not-iterable
 --> /src/mdtest_snippet.py:1:8
  |
1 | a, b = 1
  |        ^ Object of type `Literal[1]` is not iterable
  |
```

## Test Plan

New snapshot tests.
2025-02-06 15:36:22 +01:00
Micha Reiser 5588c75d65
[red-knot] Fix relative imports in `src.root` (#15990)
## Summary

Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/15989

Red Knot failed to resolve relative imports if the importing module is
located at a search path root.

The issue was that the module resolver returned an `Err(TooManyDots)` as
soon as the parent of the current module is `None` (which is the case
for a module at the search path root).
However, this is incorrect if a `tail` (a module name) exists.
2025-02-06 14:08:20 +00:00
David Peter d0555f7b5c
[red-knot] Litate tests: minor follow-up (#15987)
## Summary

- Minor wording update
- Code improvement (thanks Alex)
- Removed all unnecessary filenames throughout our Markdown tests (two
new ones were added in the meantime)
- Minor rewording of the statically-known-branches introduction
2025-02-06 07:15:26 +00:00
Douglas Creager 0906554357
[red-knot] Combine terminal statement support with statically known branches (#15817)
This example from @sharkdp shows how terminal statements can appear in
statically known branches:
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15676#issuecomment-2618809716

```py
def _(cond: bool):
    x = "a"
    if cond:
        x = "b"
        if True:
            return

    reveal_type(x)  # revealed: "a", "b"; should be "a"
```

We now use visibility constraints to track reachability, which allows us
to model this correctly. There are two related changes as a result:

- New bindings are not assumed to be visible; they inherit the current
"scope start" visibility, which effectively means that new bindings are
visible if/when the current flow is reachable

- When simplifying visibility constraints after branching control flow,
we only simplify if none of the intervening branches included a terminal
statement. That is, earlier unaffected bindings are only _actually_
unaffected if all branches make it to the merge point.
2025-02-05 17:47:49 -05:00
David Peter d296f602e7
[red-knot] Merge Markdown code blocks inside a single section (#15950)
## Summary

Allow for literate style in Markdown tests and merge multiple (unnamed)
code blocks into a single embedded file.

closes #15941

## Test Plan

- Interactively made sure that error-lines were reported correctly in
  multi-snippet sections.
2025-02-05 22:26:15 +01:00
Andrew Gallant d47088c8f8
[red-knot] fix unresolvable import range (#15976)
This causes the diagnostic to highlight the actual unresovable import
instead of the entire `from ... import ...` statement.

While we're here, we expand the test coverage to cover all of the
possible ways that an `import` or a `from ... import` can fail.

Some considerations:

* The first commit in this PR adds a regression test for the current
behavior.
* This creates a new `mdtest/diagnostics` directory. Are folks cool
with this? I guess the idea is to put tests more devoted to diagnostics
than semantics in this directory. (Although I'm guessing there will
be some overlap.)

Fixes #15866
2025-02-05 14:01:58 -05:00
David Peter 1f0ad675d3
[red-knot] Initial set of descriptor protocol tests (#15972)
## Summary

This is a first step towards creating a test suite for
[descriptors](https://docs.python.org/3/howto/descriptor.html). It does
not (yet) aim to be exhaustive.

relevant ticket: #15966 

## Test Plan

Compared desired behavior with the runtime behavior and the behavior of
existing type checkers.

---------

Co-authored-by: Mike Perlov <mishamsk@gmail.com>
2025-02-05 19:47:43 +01:00
Andrew Gallant a84b27e679 red_knot_test: add support for diagnostic snapshotting
This ties together everything from the previous commits.
Some interesting bits here are how the snapshot is generated
(where we include relevant info to make it easier to review
the snapshots) and also a tweak to how inline assertions are
processed.

This commit also includes some example snapshots just to get
a sense of what they look like. Follow-up work should add
more of these I think.
2025-02-05 13:02:54 -05:00
Alex Waygood c816542704
[red-knot] Fix some instance-attribute TODOs around `ModuleType` (#15974) 2025-02-05 15:33:37 +00:00
Alex Waygood 2ebb5e8d4b
[red-knot] Make `Symbol::or_fall_back_to()` lazy (#15943) 2025-02-05 14:51:02 +00:00
David Peter eb08345fd5
[red-knot] Extend instance/class attribute tests (#15959)
## Summary

In preparation for creating some (sub) issues for
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/14164, I'm trying to document
the current behavior (and a bug) a bit better.
2025-02-05 12:45:00 +01:00
Mike Perlov e15419396c
[red-knot] Fix Stack overflow in Type::bool (#15843)
## Summary

This PR adds `Type::call_bound` method for calls that should follow
descriptor protocol calling convention. The PR is intentionally shallow
in scope and only fixes #15672

Couple of obvious things that weren't done:

* Switch to `call_bound` everywhere it should be used
* Address the fact, that red_knot resolves `__bool__ = bool` as a Union,
which includes `Type::Dynamic` and hence fails to infer that the
truthiness is always false for such a class (I've added a todo comment
in mdtests)
* Doesn't try to invent a new type for descriptors, although I have a
gut feeling it may be more convenient in the end, instead of doing
method lookup each time like I did in `call_bound`

## Test Plan

* extended mdtests with 2 examples from the issue
* cargo neatest run
2025-02-04 12:40:07 -08:00
Douglas Creager 444b055cec
[red-knot] Use ternary decision diagrams (TDDs) for visibility constraints (#15861)
We now use ternary decision diagrams (TDDs) to represent visibility
constraints. A TDD is just like a BDD ([_binary_ decision
diagram](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_decision_diagram)), but
with "ambiguous" as an additional allowed value. Unlike the previous
representation, TDDs are strongly normalizing, so equivalent ternary
formulas are represented by exactly the same graph node, and can be
compared for equality in constant time.

We currently have a slight 1-3% performance regression with this in
place, according to local testing. However, we also have a _5× increase_
in performance for pathological cases, since we can now remove the
recursion limit when we evaluate visibility constraints.

As follow-on work, we are now closer to being able to remove the
`simplify_visibility_constraint` calls in the semantic index builder. In
the vast majority of cases, we now see (for instance) that the
visibility constraint after an `if` statement, for bindings of symbols
that weren't rebound in any branch, simplifies back to `true`. But there
are still some cases we generate constraints that are cyclic. With
fixed-point cycle support in salsa, or with some careful analysis of the
still-failing cases, we might be able to remove those.
2025-02-04 14:32:11 -05:00
David Peter 24c1cf71cb
[red-knot] Use unambiguous invalid-syntax-construct for suppression comment test (#15933)
## Summary

I experimented with [not trimming trailing newlines in code
snippets](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15926#discussion_r1940992090),
but since came to the conclusion that the current behavior is better
because otherwise, there is no way to write snippets without a trailing
newline at all. And when you copy the code from a Markdown snippet in
GitHub, you also don't get a trailing newline.

I was surprised to see some test failures when I played with this
though, and decided to make this test independent from this
implementation detail.
2025-02-04 15:24:50 +01:00
InSync 11cfe2ea8a
[red-knot] Enforce specifying paths for mdtest code blocks in a separate preceding line (#15890)
## Summary

Resolves #15695, rework of #15704.

This change modifies the Mdtests framework so that:

* Paths must now be specified in a separate preceding line:

	`````markdown
	`a.py`:

	```py
	x = 1
	```
	`````

If the path of a file conflicts with its `lang`, an error will be
thrown.

* Configs are no longer accepted. The pattern still take them into
account, however, to avoid "Unterminated code block" errors.
* Unnamed files are now assigned unique, `lang`-respecting paths
automatically.

Additionally, all legacy usages have been updated.

## Test Plan

Unit tests and Markdown tests.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-02-04 08:27:17 +01:00
David Peter 102c2eec12
[red-knot] Implicit instance attributes (#15811)
## Summary

Add support for implicitly-defined instance attributes, i.e. support
type inference for cases like this:
```py
class C:
    def __init__(self) -> None:
        self.x: int = 1
        self.y = None

reveal_type(C().x)  # int
reveal_type(C().y)  # Unknown | None
```

## Benchmarks

Codspeed reports no change in a cold-cache benchmark, and a -1%
regression in the incremental benchmark. On `black`'s `src` folder, I
don't see a statistically significant difference between the branches:

| Command | Mean [ms] | Min [ms] | Max [ms] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `./red_knot_main check --project /home/shark/black/src` | 133.7 ± 9.5 | 126.7 | 164.7 | 1.01 ± 0.08 |
| `./red_knot_feature check --project /home/shark/black/src` | 132.2 ± 5.1 | 118.1 | 140.9 | 1.00 |

## Test Plan

Updated and new Markdown tests
2025-02-03 19:34:23 +01:00
Dhruv Manilawala d082c1b202
[red-knot] Add missing imports in mdtests (#15869)
## Summary

Related to #15848, this PR adds the imports explicitly as we'll now flag
these symbols as undefined.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-02-03 09:27:29 +00:00
David Peter 451f251a31
[red-knot] Clarify behavior when redeclaring base class attributes (#15826)
# Summary

Clarify the behavior regarding re-declaration of attributes from base
classes following [this
discussion](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15808#discussion_r1934236095)
2025-01-30 14:49:23 +01:00
Alex Waygood 3125332ec1
[red-knot] Format mdtest snippets with the latest version of black (#15819) 2025-01-29 23:05:43 +00:00
Douglas Creager 15d886a502
[red-knot] Consider all definitions after terminal statements unreachable (#15676)
`FlowSnapshot` now tracks a `reachable` bool, which indicates whether we
have encountered a terminal statement on that control flow path. When
merging flow states together, we skip any that have been marked
unreachable. This ensures that bindings that can only be reached through
unreachable paths are not considered visible.

## Test Plan

The new mdtests failed (with incorrect `reveal_type` results, and
spurious `possibly-unresolved-reference` errors) before adding the new
visibility constraints.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-01-29 14:06:57 -05:00
David Peter 0f1035b930
[red-knot] Extend instance-attribute tests (#15808)
## Summary

When we discussed the plan on how to proceed with instance attributes,
we said that we should first extend our research into the behavior of
existing type checkers. The result of this research is summarized in the
newly added / modified tests in this PR. The TODO comments align with
existing behavior of other type checkers. If we deviate from the
behavior, it is described in a comment.
2025-01-29 14:06:32 +01:00
David Peter ca53eefa6f
[red-knot] Do not use explicit `knot_extensions.Unknown` declaration (#15787)
## Summary

Do not use an explict `knot_extensions.Unknown` declaration, as per
[this
comment](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15766#discussion_r1930997592).
Instead, use an undefined name to achieve the same effect.
2025-01-28 17:18:22 +01:00
David Peter 2ef94e5f3e
[red-knot] Document public symbol type inferece (#15766)
## Summary

Adds a slightly more comprehensive documentation of our behavior
regarding type inference for public uses of symbols. In particular:

- What public type do we infer for `x: int = any()`?
- What public type do we infer for `x: Unknown = 1`?
2025-01-27 10:52:13 +01:00
Alex Waygood c824140fa8
[red-knot] Ensure differently ordered unions are considered equivalent when they appear inside tuples inside top-level intersections (#15743) 2025-01-25 18:19:28 +00:00
Alex Waygood f85ea1bf46
[red-knot] Ensure differently ordered unions and intersections are understood as equivalent even inside arbitrarily nested tuples (#15740)
## Summary

On `main`, red-knot:
- Considers `P | Q` equivalent to `Q | P`
- Considered `tuple[P | Q]` equivalent to `tuple[Q | P]`
- Considers `tuple[P | tuple[P | Q]]` equivalent to `tuple[tuple[Q | P]
| P]`
- ‼️ Does _not_ consider `tuple[tuple[P | Q]]` equivalent to
`tuple[tuple[Q | P]]`

The key difference for the last one of these is that the union appears
inside a tuple that is directly nested inside another tuple.

This PR fixes this so that differently ordered unions are considered
equivalent even when they appear inside arbitrarily nested tuple types.

## Test Plan

- Added mdtests that fails on `main`
- Checked that all property tests continue to pass with this PR
2025-01-25 16:39:07 +00:00
Micha Reiser 4e3982cf95
[red-knot] Add `--ignore`, `--warn`, and `--error` CLI arguments (#15689) 2025-01-24 16:20:15 +01:00
David Peter 1feb3cf41a
[red-knot] Use `Unknown | T_inferred` for undeclared public symbols (#15674)
## Summary

Use `Unknown | T_inferred` as the type for *undeclared* public symbols.

## Test Plan

- Updated existing tests
- New test for external `__slots__` modifications.
- New tests for external modifications of public symbols.
2025-01-24 12:47:48 +01:00
David Peter 15394a8028
[red-knot] MDTests: Do not depend on precise public-symbol type inference (#15691)
## Summary

Another small PR to focus #15674 solely on the relevant changes. This
makes our Markdown tests less dependent on precise types of public
symbols, without actually changing anything semantically in these tests.

Best reviewed using ignore-whitespace-mode.

## Test Plan

Tested these changes on `main` and on the branch from #15674.
2025-01-23 13:51:33 +00:00
David Peter 0173738eef
[red-knot] Port comprehension tests to Markdown (#15688)
## Summary

Port comprehension tests from Rust to Markdown

I don' think the remaining tests in `infer.rs` should be ported to
Markdown, maybe except for the incremental-checking tests when (if ever)
we have support for that in the MD tests.


closes #13696
2025-01-23 12:49:30 +00:00
David Peter 1e790d3885
[red-knot] Port 'deferred annotations' unit tests to Markdown (#15686)
## Summary

- Port "deferred annotations" unit tests to Markdown
- Port `implicit_global_in_function` unit test to Markdown
- Removed `resolve_method` and `local_inference` unit tests. These seem
  like relics from a time where type inference was in it's early stages.
  There is no way that these tests would fail today without lots of other
  things going wrong as well.

part of #13696
based on #15683 

## Test Plan

New MD tests for existing Rust unit tests.
2025-01-23 11:45:05 +00:00
David Peter 7855f03735
[red-knot] Support custom typeshed Markdown tests (#15683)
## Summary

- Add feature to specify a custom typeshed from within Markdown-based
  tests
- Port "builtins" unit tests from `infer.rs` to Markdown tests, part of
  #13696

## Test Plan

- Tests for the custom typeshed feature
- New Markdown tests for deleted Rust unit tests
2025-01-23 12:36:38 +01:00
David Peter 1ecd97855e
[red-knot] Add test for nested attribute access (#15684)
## Summary

Add a new test for attribute accesses in case of nested modules /
classes. Resolves this comment:

https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15613#discussion_r1925637561

## Test Plan

New MD test.
2025-01-23 10:26:34 +01:00
Alex Waygood b4877f1661
[red-knot] Ensure a gradual type can always be assigned to itself (#15675) 2025-01-22 16:01:13 +00:00
David Peter 13e7afca42
[red-knot] Improved error message for attribute-assignments (#15668)
## Summary

Slightly improved error message for attribute assignments.
2025-01-22 11:04:38 +00:00
David Peter f349dab4fc
[red-knot] Invalid assignments to attributes (#15613)
## Summary

Raise "invalid-assignment" diagnostics for incorrect assignments to
attributes, for example:

```py
class C:
    var: str = "a"

C.var = 1  # error: "Object of type `Literal[1]` is not assignable to `str`"
```

closes #15456 

## Test Plan

- Updated test assertions
- New test for assignments to module-attributes
2025-01-22 10:42:47 +01:00
Alex Waygood 187a358d7a
[red-knot] Heterogeneous tuple types with differently ordered (but equivalent) unions at the same index should be considered equivalent (#15637) 2025-01-21 12:51:20 +00:00
wooly18 f82ef32e53
[`red-knot`] No `cyclic-class-def` diagnostics for subclasses of cyclic classes (#15561)
Co-authored-by: Dhruv Manilawala <dhruvmanila@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2025-01-20 13:35:29 +00:00
David Peter 4eb465ee95
[red-knot] Move `type_alias_types` test to Markdown (#15607)
## Summary

Move `type_alias_types` test to Markdown

## Test Plan

New MD test
2025-01-20 09:55:54 +01:00
David Peter 9725a2d476
[red-knot] More exhaustive disjointness tests (#15606)
## Summary

Mostly just brings the structure/format of the disjointness-tests closer
to what we have for `is_subtype_of` etc.
2025-01-20 09:47:51 +01:00
InSync 975d1457c5
[red-knot] Migrate `is_disjoint_from` unit tests to Markdown tests (#15580)
## Summary

Part of and resolves #15397, built on top of #15579.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.
2025-01-20 08:42:22 +01:00
Alex Waygood 2b24b3b316
[red-knot] Ensure differently ordered unions and intersections are considered equivalent (#15516) 2025-01-19 16:10:42 +00:00
David Peter fb15da5694
[red-knot] Add support for `typing.ClassVar` (#15550)
## Summary

Add support for `typing.ClassVar`, i.e. emit a diagnostic in this
scenario:
```py
from typing import ClassVar

class C:
    x: ClassVar[int] = 1

c = C()
c.x = 3  # error: "Cannot assign to pure class variable `x` from an instance of type `C`"
```

## Test Plan

- New tests for the `typing.ClassVar` qualifier
- Fixed one TODO in `attributes.md`
2025-01-18 13:51:35 +01:00
InSync 9d845ec8f5
[red-knot] Migrate `is_gradual_equivalent_to` unit tests to Markdown tests (#15563)
## Summary

Part of #15397 and #15516.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.
2025-01-17 16:48:01 -08:00
Alex Waygood 4328df7226
[red-knot] `type[T]` is disjoint from `type[S]` if the metaclass of `T` is disjoint from the metaclass of `S` (#15547) 2025-01-17 10:41:36 +00:00
David Peter 6771b8ebd2
[red-knot] Pure instance variables declared in class body (#15515)
## Summary

This is a small, tentative step towards the bigger goal of understanding
instance attributes.

- Adds partial support for pure instance variables declared in the class
  body, i.e. this case:
  ```py
  class C:
      variable1: str = "a"
      variable2 = "b"

  reveal_type(C().variable1)  # str
  reveal_type(C().variable2)  # Unknown | Literal["b"]
  ```
- Adds `property` as a known class to query for `@property` decorators
- Splits up various `@Todo(instance attributes)` cases into
  sub-categories.

## Test Plan

Modified existing MD tests.
2025-01-17 10:48:20 +01:00
Alex Waygood 3950b00ee4
[red-knot] Implement disjointness for Instance types where the underlying class is `@final` (#15539)
## Summary

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/15508

For any two instance types `T` and `S`, we know they are disjoint if
either `T` is final and `T` is not a subclass of `S` or `S` is final and
`S` is not a subclass of `T`.

Correspondingly, for any two types `type[T]` and `S` where `S` is an
instance type, `type[T]` can be said to be disjoint from `S` if `S` is
disjoint from `U`, where `U` is the type that represents all instances
of `T`'s metaclass.

And a heterogeneous tuple type can be said to be disjoint from an
instance type if the instance type is disjoint from `tuple` (a type
representing all instances of the `tuple` class at runtime).

## Test Plan

- A new mdtest added. Most of our `is_disjoint_from()` tests are not
written as mdtests just yet, but it's pretty hard to test some of these
edge cases from a Rust unit test!
- Ran `QUICKCHECK_TESTS=1000000 cargo test --release -p
red_knot_python_semantic -- --ignored types::property_tests::stable`

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-01-16 23:48:52 +00:00
InSync 2e6729d900
[red-knot] Migrate `bool`/`str`/`repr` unit tests to Markdown tests (#15534)
## Summary

Part of #15397.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.
2025-01-16 11:21:56 -08:00
InSync 6f0b66278f
[red-knot] Migrate `is_fully_static`/`is_single_valued`/`is_singleton` unit tests to Markdown tests (#15533)
## Summary

Part of #15397.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-01-16 07:40:41 -08:00
Shaygan Hooshyari cf4ab7cba1
Parse triple quoted string annotations as if parenthesized (#15387)
## Summary

Resolves #9467 

Parse quoted annotations as if the string content is inside parenthesis.
With this logic `x` and `y` in this example are equal:

```python
y: """
   int |
   str
"""

z: """(
    int |
    str
)
"""
```

Also this rule only applies to triple
quotes([link](https://github.com/python/typing-council/issues/9#issuecomment-1890808610)).

This PR is based on the
[comments](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9467#issuecomment-2579180991)
on the issue.

I did one extra change, since we don't want any indentation tokens I am
setting the `State::Other` as the initial state of the Lexer.

Remaining work:

- [x] Add a test case for red-knot.
- [x] Add more tests.

## Test Plan

Added a test which previously failed because quoted annotation contained
indentation.
Added an mdtest for red-knot.
Updated previous test.

Co-authored-by: Dhruv Manilawala <dhruvmanila@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
2025-01-16 11:38:15 +05:30
David Peter c034e280a9
[red-knot] Instance attributes: type inference clarifications (#15512)
## Summary

Some clarifications in the instance-attributes tests, mostly regarding
type inference behavior following this discussion:

https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15474#discussion_r1917044566
2025-01-15 21:17:55 +01:00
Alex Waygood 49557a9129
[red-knot] Simplify `object` out of intersections (#15511) 2025-01-15 20:06:48 +00:00
David Peter 4f3209a3ec
[red-knot] More comprehensive 'is_subtype_of' tests (#15490)
## Summary

Make the `is_subtype_of` tests a bit easier to understand and
more comprehensive.
2025-01-15 18:33:29 +00:00
Alex Waygood 55a7f72035
[red-knot] Fix more edge cases for intersection simplification with `LiteralString` and `AlwaysTruthy`/`AlwaysFalsy` (#15496) 2025-01-15 15:02:41 +00:00
David Peter 8712438aec
[red-knot] Initial tests for instance attributes (#15474)
## Summary

Adds some initial tests for class and instance attributes, mostly to
document (and discuss) what we want to support eventually. These
tests are not exhaustive yet. The idea is to specify the coarse-grained
behavior first.

Things that we'll eventually want to test:

- Interplay with inheritance
- Support `Final` in addition to `ClassVar`
- Specific tests for `ClassVar`, like making sure that we support things
like `x: Annotated[ClassVar[int], "metadata"]`
- … or making sure that we raise an error here:
  ```py
  class Foo:
      def __init__(self):
          self.x: ClassVar[str] = "x"
  ```
- Add tests for `__new__` in addition to the tests for `__init__`
- Add tests that show that we use the union of types if multiple methods
define the symbol with different types
- Make sure that diagnostics are raised if, e.g., the inferred type of
an assignment within a method does not match the declared type in the
class body.
- https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/15474#discussion_r1916556284
- Method calls are completely left out for now.
- Same for `@property`
- … and the descriptor protocol

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-01-15 14:43:41 +00:00
David Peter 3a6238d8c2
[red-knot] Typeshed sync and `sys.platform` fixes (#15492)
## Summary

The next sync of typeshed would have failed without manual changes
anyway, so I'm doing one manual sync + the required changes in our
`sys.platform` tests (which are necessary because of my tiny typeshed PR
here: https://github.com/python/typeshed/pull/13378).

closes #15485 (the next run of the pipeline in two weeks should be fine
as the bug has been fixed upstream)
2025-01-15 11:21:01 +01:00
InSync aefb607405
[red-knot] Migrate `is_equivalent_to` unit tests to Markdown tests (#15470)
## Summary

Part of #15397, built on top of #15469.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.
2025-01-14 18:57:23 +00:00
Alex Waygood bcf0a715c2
[red-knot] Corrections and improvements to intersection simplification (#15475) 2025-01-14 18:15:38 +00:00
InSync 5ed7b55b15
[red-knot] Migrate `is_subtype_of` unit tests to Markdown tests (#15469)
## Summary

Part of #15397.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.

---------

Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
2025-01-14 15:57:24 +01:00
David Peter 8aac69bb2e
[red-knot] Add boundness and declaredness tests (#15453)
## Summary

This changeset adds new tests for public uses of symbols,
considering all possible declaredness and boundness states.

Note that this is a mere documentation of the current behavior. There is
still an [open ticket] questioning some of these choices (or unintential
behaviors).

## Test plan

Made sure that the respective test fails if I add the questionable case
again in `symbol_by_id`:

```rs
Symbol::Type(inferred_ty, Boundness::Bound) => {
    Symbol::Type(inferred_ty, Boundness::Bound)
}
```

[open ticket]: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/14297
2025-01-14 13:07:16 +01:00
Carl Meyer d54c19b983
[red-knot] remove CallOutcome::Cast variant (#15461)
## Summary

Simplification follow-up to #15413.

There's no need to have a dedicated `CallOutcome` variant for every
known function, it's only necessary if the special-cased behavior of the
known function includes emitting extra diagnostics. For `typing.cast`,
there's no such need; we can use the regular `Callable` outcome variant,
and update the return type according to the cast. (This is the same way
we already handle `len`.)

One reason to avoid proliferating unnecessary `CallOutcome` variants is
that currently we have to explicitly add emitting call-binding
diagnostics, for each outcome variant. So we were previously wrongly
silencing any binding diagnostics on calls to `typing.cast`. Fixing this
revealed a separate bug, that we were emitting a bogus error anytime
more than one keyword argument mapped to a `**kwargs` parameter. So this
PR also adds test and fix for that bug.

## Test Plan

Existing `cast` tests pass unchanged, added new test for `**kwargs` bug.
2025-01-13 10:58:53 -08:00
InSync d1666fbbee
[red-knot] Add `AlwaysTruthy` and `AlwaysFalsy` to `knot_extensions` (#15437)
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-01-12 17:00:57 +00:00
InSync 6ae3e8f8d7
[red-knot] Support `cast` (#15413)
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-01-12 13:05:45 +00:00
David Peter 2d82445794
[red-knot] Simplify unions of T and ~T (#15400)
## Summary

Simplify unions of `T` and `~T` to `object`.

## Test Plan

Adapted existing tests.
2025-01-10 23:00:52 +01:00
David Peter 398f2e8b0c
[red-knot] Minor fixes in intersection-types tests (#15410)
## Summary

Minor fixes in intersection-types tests
2025-01-10 22:53:03 +01:00
InSync 232fbc1300
[red-knot] Understand `type[Unknown]` (#15409)
## Summary

Follow-up to #15194.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.
2025-01-10 13:25:59 -08:00
InSync 6b98a26452
[red-knot] Support `assert_type` (#15194)
## Summary

See #15103.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests and unit tests.
2025-01-10 08:45:02 -08:00
David Peter c87463842a
[red-knot] Move tuple-containing-Never tests to Markdown (#15402)
## Summary

See title.

Part of #15397

## Test Plan

Ran new Markdown test.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-01-10 15:31:30 +00:00
David Peter f2c3ddc5ea
[red-knot] Move intersection type tests to Markdown (#15396)
## Summary

[**Rendered version of the new test
suite**](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/blob/david/intersection-type-tests/crates/red_knot_python_semantic/resources/mdtest/intersection_types.md)

Moves most of our existing intersection-types tests to a dedicated
Markdown test suite, extends the test coverage, unifies the notation for
these tests, groups tests into a proper structure, and adds some
explanations for various simplification strategies.

This changeset also:
- Adds a new simplification where `~Never` is removed from
intersections.
- Adds a new simplification where adding `~object` simplifies the whole
intersection to `Never`
- Avoids unnecessary assignment-checks between inferred and declared
type. This was added to this changeset to avoid many false positive
errors in this test suite.

Resolves the task described in this old comment
[here](e01da82a5a..e7e432bca2 (r1819924085)).

## Test Plan

Running the new Markdown tests

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-01-10 14:04:03 +01:00
David Peter b33cf5baba
[red-knot] Move `UnionBuilder` tests to Markdown (#15374)
## Summary

This moves almost all of our existing `UnionBuilder` tests to a
Markdown-based test suite.

I see how this could be a more controversial change, since these tests
where written specifically for `UnionBuilder`, and by creating the union
types using Python type expressions, we add an additional layer on top
(parsing and inference of these expressions) that moves these tests away
from clean unit tests more in the direction of integration tests. Also,
there are probably a few implementation details of `UnionBuilder` hidden
in the test assertions (e.g. order of union elements after
simplifications).

That said, I think we would like to see all those properties that are
being tested here from *any* implementation of union types. And the
Markdown tests come with the usual advantages:

- More consice
- Better readability
- No re-compiliation when working on tests
- Easier to add additional explanations and structure to the test suite

This changeset adds a few additional tests, but keeps the logic of the
existing tests except for a few minor modifications for consistency.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: T-256 <132141463+T-256@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-01-09 21:45:06 +01:00
Carl Meyer a95deec00f
[red-knot] handle synthetic 'self' argument in call-binding diagnostics (#15362) 2025-01-09 00:36:48 -08:00
InSync 21aa12a073
[red-knot] More precise inference for classes with non-class metaclasses (#15138)
## Summary

Resolves #14208.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-01-09 00:34:04 +00:00
David Peter beb8e2dfe0
[red-knot] More comprehensive `is_assignable_to` tests (#15353)
## Summary

This changeset migrates all existing `is_assignable_to` tests to a
Markdown-based test. It also increases our test coverage in a hopefully
meaningful way (not claiming to be complete in any sense). But at least
I found and fixed one bug while doing so.

## Test Plan

Ran property tests to make sure the new test succeeds after fixing it.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-01-08 20:25:08 +01:00
David Peter 235fdfc57a
[red-knot] `knot_extensions` Python API (#15103)
## Summary

Adds a type-check-time Python API that allows us to create and
manipulate types and to test various of their properties. For example,
this can be used to write a Markdown test to make sure that `A & B` is a
subtype of `A` and `B`, but not of an unrelated class `C` (something
that requires quite a bit more code to do in Rust):
```py
from knot_extensions import Intersection, is_subtype_of, static_assert

class A: ...
class B: ...

type AB = Intersection[A, B]

static_assert(is_subtype_of(AB, A))
static_assert(is_subtype_of(AB, B))

class C: ...
static_assert(not is_subtype_of(AB, C))
```

I think this functionality is also helpful for interactive debugging
sessions, in order to query various properties of Red Knot's type
system. Which is something that otherwise requires a custom Rust unit
test, some boilerplate code and constant re-compilation.

## Test Plan

- New Markdown tests
- Tested the modified typeshed_sync workflow locally
2025-01-08 12:52:07 +01:00
Shaygan Hooshyari 03ff883626
Display Union of Literals as a Literal (#14993)
## Summary

Resolves #14988

Display union of Literals like other type checkers do.

With this change we lose the sorting behavior. And we show the types as
they appeared. So it's deterministic and tests should not be flaky.
This is similar to how Mypy [reveals the
type](https://mypy-play.net/?mypy=latest&python=3.12&gist=51ad03b153bfca3b940d5084345e230f).

In some cases this makes it harder to know what is the order in revealed
type when writing tests but since it's consistent after the test fails
we know the order.

## Test Plan

I adjusted mdtests for this change. Basically merged the int and string
types of the unions.

In cases where we have types other than numbers and strings like this
[one](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/14993/files#diff-ac50bce02b9f0ad4dc7d6b8e1046d60dad919ac52d0aeb253e5884f89ea42bfeL51).
We only group the strings and numbers as the issue suggsted.

```
def _(flag: bool, flag2: bool):
    if flag:
        f = 1
    elif flag2:
        f = "foo"
    else:
        def f() -> int:
            return 1
    # error: "Object of type `Literal[1, "foo", f]` is not callable (due to union elements Literal[1], Literal["foo"])"
    # revealed: Unknown | int
    reveal_type(f())
```

[pyright
example](https://pyright-play.net/?code=GYJw9gtgBALgngBwJYDsDmUkQWEMoAySMApiAIYA2AUNQCYnBQD6AFMJeWgFxQBGYMJQA0UDlwBMvAUICU3alCWYm4nouWamAXigBGDUpKUkqzmimHNYqLoBEwQXavGAziQXXlDVa1lQAWgA%2BTBQYTy9rEBIYAFcQFH0rAGIoMnAQXjsAeT4AKxIAY3wwJngEEigAAyJSCkoAbT1RBydRYABdKsxXKBQwfEKqTj5KStY6WMqYMChYlCQwROMSCBIw3tqyKiaO0S36htawOw7ZZ01U6IA3EioSOl4AVRQAa36Ad0SAH1CYKxud0ozHKJHYflk1CAA)

[mypy
example](https://mypy-play.net/?mypy=latest&python=3.12&gist=31c8bdaa5521860cfeca4b92841cb3b7)

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@oddbird.net>
2025-01-08 00:58:38 +00:00
Douglas Creager b2a0d68d70
Narrowing for class patterns in match statements (#15223)
We now support class patterns in a match statement, adding a narrowing
constraint that within the body of that match arm, we can assume that
the subject is an instance of that class.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
2025-01-07 15:58:12 -05:00
Carl Meyer f2a86fcfda
[red-knot] add call checking (#15200)
## Summary

This implements checking of calls.

I ended up following Micha's original suggestion from back when the
signature representation was first introduced, and flattening it to a
single array of parameters. This turned out to be easier to manage,
because we can represent parameters using indices into that array, and
represent the bound argument types as an array of the same length.

Starred and double-starred arguments are still TODO; these won't be very
useful until we have generics.

The handling of diagnostics is just hacked into `return_ty_result`,
which was already inconsistent about whether it emitted diagnostics or
not; now it's even more inconsistent. This needs to be addressed, but
could be a follow-up.

The new benchmark errors here surface the need for intersection support
in `is_assignable_to`.

Fixes #14161.

## Test Plan

Added mdtests.
2025-01-07 20:39:45 +00:00
Alex Waygood 95294e657c
[red-knot] Eagerly normalize `type[]` types (#15272)
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2025-01-07 12:53:07 +00:00
Douglas Creager 5e9259c96c
Don't special-case class instances in binary expression inference (#15161)
Just like in #15045 for unary expressions: In binary expressions, we
were only looking for dunder expressions for `Type::Instance` types. We
had some special cases for coercing the various `Literal` types into
their corresponding `Instance` types before doing the lookup. But we can
side-step all of that by using the existing `Type::to_meta_type` and
`Type::to_instance` methods.
2025-01-06 13:50:20 -05:00
Alex Waygood 980ce941c7
[red-knot] Minor simplifications and improvements to constraint narrowing logic (#15270) 2025-01-05 21:51:22 +00:00
Shaygan Hooshyari b26448926a
Allow assigning ellipsis literal as parameter default value (#14982)
Resolves #14840

## Summary

Usage of ellipsis literal as default argument is allowed in stub files.

## Test Plan

Added mdtest for both python files and stub files.


---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@oddbird.net>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-01-05 13:11:32 -06:00
Carl Meyer 2ea63620cf
[red-knot] fix control flow for assignment expressions in elif tests (#15274)
## Summary

The test expression in an `elif` clause is evaluated whether or not we
take the branch. Our control flow model for if/elif chains failed to
reflect this, causing wrong inference in cases where an assignment
expression occurs inside an `elif` test expression. Our "no branch taken
yet" snapshot (which is the starting state for every new elif branch)
can't simply be the pre-if state, it must be updated after visiting each
test expression.

Once we do this, it also means we no longer need to track a vector of
narrowing constraints to reapply for each new branch, since our "branch
not taken" state (which is the initial state for each branch) is
continuously updated to include the negative narrowing constraints of
all previous branches.

Fixes #15033.

## Test Plan

Added mdtests.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-01-05 18:35:29 +00:00
Micha Reiser 0caab81d3d
`@no_type_check` support (#15122)
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2024-12-30 09:42:18 +00:00
Dhruv Manilawala 8a98d88847
[red-knot] Add diagnostic for invalid unpacking (#15086)
## Summary

Part of #13773 

This PR adds diagnostics when there is a length mismatch during
unpacking between the number of target expressions and the number of
types for the unpack value expression.

There are 3 cases of diagnostics here where the first two occurs when
there isn't a starred expression and the last one occurs when there's a
starred expression:
1. Number of target expressions is **less** than the number of types
that needs to be unpacked
2. Number of target expressions is **greater** then the number of types
that needs to be unpacked
3. When there's a starred expression as one of the target expression and
the number of target expressions is greater than the number of types

Examples for all each of the above cases:
```py
# red-knot: Too many values to unpack (expected 2, got 3) [lint:invalid-assignment]
a, b = (1, 2, 3)

# red-knot: Not enough values to unpack (expected 2, got 1) [lint:invalid-assignment]
a, b = (1,)

# red-knot: Not enough values to unpack (expected 3 or more, got 2) [lint:invalid-assignment]
a, *b, c, d = (1, 2)
```

The (3) case is a bit special because it uses a distinct wording
"expected n or more" instead of "expected n" because of the starred
expression.

### Location

The diagnostic location is the target expression that's being unpacked.
For nested targets, the location will be the nested expression. For
example:

```py
(a, (b, c), d) = (1, (2, 3, 4), 5)
#   ^^^^^^
#   red-knot: Too many values to unpack (expected 2, got 3) [lint:invalid-assignment]
```

For future improvements, it would be useful to show the context for why
this unpacking failed. For example, for why the expected number of
targets is `n`, we can highlight the relevant elements for the value
expression.

In the **ecosystem**, **Pyright** uses the target expressions for
location while **mypy** uses the value expression for the location. For
example:

```py
if 1:
#          mypy: Too many values to unpack (2 expected, 3 provided)  [misc]
#          vvvvvvvvv
	a, b = (1, 2, 3)
#   ^^^^
#   Pyright: Expression with type "tuple[Literal[1], Literal[2], Literal[3]]" cannot be assigned to target tuple
#     Type "tuple[Literal[1], Literal[2], Literal[3]]" is incompatible with target tuple
#       Tuple size mismatch; expected 2 but received 3 [reportAssignmentType]
#   red-knot: Too many values to unpack (expected 2, got 3) [lint:invalid-assignment]
```

## Test Plan

Update existing test cases TODO with the error directives.
2024-12-30 13:10:29 +05:30
Shantanu bc3a735d93
Test explicit shadowing involving `def`s (#15174)
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2024-12-29 00:47:03 +00:00
InSync 8d2d1a73c5
[red-knot] Report classes inheriting from bases with incompatible `__slots__` (#15129) 2024-12-27 11:43:48 +00:00
Micha Reiser 6ed27c3786
Rename the `knot|type-ignore` mdtest files (#15147) 2024-12-26 10:25:05 +00:00
Micha Reiser 8d327087ef
Add `invalid-ignore-comment` rule (#15094) 2024-12-23 10:38:10 +00:00
Micha Reiser 2835d94ec5
Add `unknown-rule` (#15085)
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2024-12-23 11:30:54 +01:00
Micha Reiser 2a99c0be02
Add `unused-ignore-comment` rule (#15084) 2024-12-23 11:15:28 +01:00
Micha Reiser 1c3d11e8a8
Support file-level `type: ignore` comments (#15081) 2024-12-23 09:59:04 +00:00
Micha Reiser 2f85749fa0
`type: ignore[codes]` and `knot: ignore` (#15078) 2024-12-23 10:52:43 +01:00
Dhruv Manilawala 113c804a62
[red-knot] Add support for unpacking `for` target (#15058)
## Summary

Related to #13773 

This PR adds support for unpacking `for` statement targets.

This involves updating the `value` field in the `Unpack` target to use
an enum which specifies the "where did the value expression came from?".
This is because for an iterable expression, we need to unpack the
iterator type while for assignment statement we need to unpack the value
type itself. And, this needs to be done in the unpack query.

### Question

One of the ways unpacking works in `for` statement is by looking at the
union of the types because if the iterable expression is a tuple then
the iterator type will be union of all the types in the tuple. This
means that the test cases that will test the unpacking in `for`
statement will also implicitly test the unpacking union logic. I was
wondering if it makes sense to merge these cases and only add the ones
that are specific to the union unpacking or for statement unpacking
logic.

## Test Plan

Add test cases involving iterating over a tuple type. I've intentionally
left out certain cases for now and I'm curious to know any thoughts on
the above query.
2024-12-23 06:13:49 +00:00
InSync f764f59971
[red-knot] Treat classes as instances of their respective metaclasses in boolean tests (#15105)
## Summary

Follow-up to #15089.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2024-12-23 01:30:51 +00:00
InSync 3b27d5dbad
[red-knot] More precise inference for chained boolean expressions (#15089)
## Summary

Resolves #13632.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.
2024-12-22 10:02:28 -08:00
David Peter 000948ad3b
[red-knot] Statically known branches (#15019)
## Summary

This changeset adds support for precise type-inference and
boundness-handling of definitions inside control-flow branches with
statically-known conditions, i.e. test-expressions whose truthiness we
can unambiguously infer as *always false* or *always true*.

This branch also includes:
- `sys.platform` support
- statically-known branches handling for Boolean expressions and while
  loops
- new `target-version` requirements in some Markdown tests which were
  now required due to the understanding of `sys.version_info` branches.

closes #12700 
closes #15034 

## Performance

### `tomllib`, -7%, needs to resolve one additional module (sys)

| Command | Mean [ms] | Min [ms] | Max [ms] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `./red_knot_main --project /home/shark/tomllib` | 22.2 ± 1.3 | 19.1 |
25.6 | 1.00 |
| `./red_knot_feature --project /home/shark/tomllib` | 23.8 ± 1.6 | 20.8
| 28.6 | 1.07 ± 0.09 |

### `black`, -6%

| Command | Mean [ms] | Min [ms] | Max [ms] | Relative |
|:---|---:|---:|---:|---:|
| `./red_knot_main --project /home/shark/black` | 129.3 ± 5.1 | 119.0 |
137.8 | 1.00 |
| `./red_knot_feature --project /home/shark/black` | 136.5 ± 6.8 | 123.8
| 147.5 | 1.06 ± 0.07 |

## Test Plan

- New Markdown tests for the main feature in
  `statically-known-branches.md`
- New Markdown tests for `sys.platform`
- Adapted tests for `EllipsisType`, `Never`, etc
2024-12-21 11:33:10 +01:00
Dhruv Manilawala d47fba1e4a
[red-knot] Add support for unpacking union types (#15052)
## Summary

Refer:
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/13773#issuecomment-2548020368

This PR adds support for unpacking union types. 

Unpacking a union type requires us to first distribute the types for all
the targets that are involved in an unpacking. For example, if there are
two targets and a union type that needs to be unpacked, each target will
get a type from each element in the union type.

For example, if the type is `tuple[int, int] | tuple[int, str]` and the
target has two elements `(a, b)`, then
* The type of `a` will be a union of `int` and `int` which are at index
0 in the first and second tuple respectively which resolves to an `int`.
* Similarly, the type of `b` will be a union of `int` and `str` which
are at index 1 in the first and second tuple respectively which will be
`int | str`.

### Refactors

There are couple of refactors that are added in this PR:
* Add a `debug_assertion` to validate that the unpack target is a list
or a tuple
* Add a separate method to handle starred expression

## Test Plan

Update `unpacking.md` with additional test cases that uses union types.
This is done using parameter type hints style.
2024-12-20 16:31:15 +05:30
Micha Reiser 913bce3cd5
Basic support for `type: ignore` comments (#15046)
## Summary

This PR adds initial support for `type: ignore`. It doesn't do anything
fancy yet like:

* Detecting invalid type ignore comments
* Detecting type ignore comments that are part of another suppression
comment: `# fmt: skip # type: ignore`
* Suppressing specific lints `type: ignore [code]`
* Detecting unsused type ignore comments
* ...

The goal is to add this functionality in separate PRs.

## Test Plan

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2024-12-20 10:35:09 +01:00
Alex Waygood 3aed14935d
[red-knot] Add support for `@final` classes (#15070)
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2024-12-19 21:02:14 +00:00
Alex Waygood bb43085939
[red-knot] Reduce TODOs in `Type::member()` (#15066) 2024-12-19 15:54:01 +00:00
Alex Waygood 40cba5dc8a
[red-knot] Cleanup various `todo_type!()` messages (#15063)
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
2024-12-19 13:03:41 +00:00
Douglas Creager 2802cbde29
Don't special-case class instances in unary expression inference (#15045)
We have a handy `to_meta_type` that does the right thing for class
instances, and also works for all of the other types that are “instances
of” something. Unless I'm missing something, this should let us get rid
of the catch-all clause in one fell swoop.

cf #14548
2024-12-18 14:37:17 -05:00
InSync ed2bce6ebb
[red-knot] Report invalid exceptions (#15042)
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2024-12-18 18:31:24 +00:00
Douglas Creager e8e461da6a
Prioritize attribute in from/import statement (#15041)
This tweaks the new semantics from #15026 a bit when a symbol could be
interpreted both as an attribute and a submodule of a package. For
`from...import`, we should actually prioritize the attribute, because of
how the statement itself is implemented [1].

> 1. check if the imported module has an attribute by that name
> 2. if not, attempt to import a submodule with that name and then check
the imported module again for that attribute

[1] https://docs.python.org/3/reference/simple_stmts.html#the-import-statement
2024-12-17 16:58:23 -05:00
Douglas Creager 91c9168dd7
Handle nested imports correctly in `from ... import` (#15026)
#14946 fixed our handling of nested imports with the `import` statement,
but didn't touch `from...import` statements.

cf
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/14826#issuecomment-2525344515
2024-12-17 14:23:34 -05:00
cake-monotone f463fa7b7c
[red-knot] Narrowing For Truthiness Checks (`if x` or `if not x`) (#14687)
## Summary

Fixes #14550.

Add `AlwaysTruthy` and `AlwaysFalsy` types, representing the set of objects whose `__bool__` method can only ever return `True` or `False`, respectively, and narrow `if x` and `if not x` accordingly.


## Test Plan

- New Markdown test for truthiness narrowing `narrow/truthiness.md`
- unit tests in `types.rs` and `builders.rs` (`cargo test --package
red_knot_python_semantic --lib -- types`)
2024-12-17 08:37:07 -08:00
Alex Waygood 463046ae07
[red-knot] Explicitly test diagnostics are emitted for unresolvable submodule imports (#15035) 2024-12-17 12:55:50 +00:00
InSync 7c2e7cf25e
[red-knot] Basic support for other legacy `typing` aliases (#14998)
## Summary

Resolves #14997.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.
2024-12-17 09:33:15 +00:00
Dhruv Manilawala dcdc6e7c64
[red-knot] Avoid undeclared path when raising conflicting declarations (#14958)
## Summary

This PR updates the logic when raising conflicting declarations
diagnostic to avoid the undeclared path if present.

The conflicting declaration diagnostics is added when there are two or
more declarations in the control flow path of a definition whose type
isn't equivalent to each other. This can be seen in the following
example:

```py
if flag:
	x: int
x = 1  # conflicting-declarations: Unknown, int
```

After this PR, we'd avoid considering "Unknown" as part of the
conflicting declarations. This means we'd still flag it for the
following case:

```py
if flag:
	x: int
else:
	x: str
x = 1  # conflicting-declarations: int, str
```

A solution that's local to the exception control flow was also explored
which required updating the logic for merging the flow snapshot to avoid
considering declarations using a flag. This is preserved here:
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/compare/dhruv/control-flow-no-declarations?expand=1.

The main motivation to avoid that is we don't really understand what the
user experience is w.r.t. the Unknown type and the
conflicting-declaration diagnostics. This makes us unsure on what the
right semantics are as to whether that diagnostics should be raised or
not and when to raise them. For now, we've decided to move forward with
this PR and could decide to adopt another solution or remove the
conflicting-declaration diagnostics in the future.

Closes: #13966 

## Test Plan

Update the existing mdtest case. Add an additional case specific to
exception control flow to verify that the diagnostic is not being raised
now.
2024-12-17 09:49:39 +05:30
Douglas Creager 4ddf9228f6
Bind top-most parent when importing nested module (#14946)
When importing a nested module, we were correctly creating a binding for
the top-most parent, but we were binding that to the nested module, not
to that parent module. Moreover, we weren't treating those submodules as
members of their containing parents. This PR addresses both issues, so
that nested imports work as expected.

As discussed in ~Slack~ whatever chat app I find myself in these days
😄, this requires keeping track of which modules have been imported
within the current file, so that when we resolve member access on a
module reference, we can see if that member has been imported as a
submodule. If so, we return the submodule reference immediately, instead
of checking whether the parent module's definition defines the symbol.

This is currently done in a flow insensitive manner. The `SemanticIndex`
now tracks all of the modules that are imported (via `import`, not via
`from...import`). The member access logic mentioned above currently only
considers module imports in the file containing the attribute
expression.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2024-12-16 16:15:40 -05:00
Alex Waygood 1389cb8e59
[red-knot] Emit an error if a bare `Annotated` or `Literal` is used in a type expression (#14973) 2024-12-15 02:00:52 +00:00
Alex Waygood fa46ba2306
[red-knot] Fix bugs relating to assignability of dynamic `type[]` types (#14972) 2024-12-15 01:15:10 +00:00
github-actions[bot] 53c7ef8bfe
Sync vendored typeshed stubs (#14977)
Co-authored-by: typeshedbot <>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2024-12-15 01:02:41 +00:00
Alex Waygood 90a5439791
[red-knot] Use `type[Unknown]` rather than `Unknown` as the fallback metaclass for invalid classes (#14961) 2024-12-13 19:48:51 +00:00
InSync aa1938f6ba
[red-knot] Understand `Annotated` (#14950)
## Summary

Resolves #14922.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2024-12-13 09:41:37 -08:00
David Peter c3a64b44b7
[red-knot] mdtest: python version requirements (#14954)
## Summary

This is not strictly required yet, but makes these tests future-proof.
They need a `python-version` requirement as they rely on language
features that are not available in 3.9.
2024-12-13 10:40:38 +01:00
David Peter e96b13c027
[red-knot] Support `typing.TYPE_CHECKING` (#14952)
## Summary

Add support for `typing.TYPE_CHECKING` and
`typing_extensions.TYPE_CHECKING`.

relates to: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/14170

## Test Plan

New Markdown-based tests
2024-12-13 09:24:48 +00:00
David Peter 2ccc9b19a7
[red-knot] Improve `match` mdtests (#14951)
## Summary

Minor improvement for the `match` tests to make sure we can't infer
statically whether or not a certain `case` applies.
2024-12-13 09:50:17 +01:00
Micha Reiser c1837e4189
Rename `custom-typeshed-dir`, `target-version` and `current-directory` CLI options (#14930)
## Summary

This PR renames the `--custom-typeshed-dir`, `target-version`, and
`--current-directory` cli options to `--typeshed`,
`--python-version`, and `--project` as discussed in the CLI proposal
document.
I added aliases for `--target-version` (for Ruff compat) and
`--custom-typeshed-dir` (for Alex)

## Test Plan

Long help

```
An extremely fast Python type checker.

Usage: red_knot [OPTIONS] [COMMAND]

Commands:
  server  Start the language server
  help    Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)

Options:
      --project <PROJECT>
          Run the command within the given project directory.
          
          All `pyproject.toml` files will be discovered by walking up the directory tree from the project root, as will the project's virtual environment (`.venv`).
          
          Other command-line arguments (such as relative paths) will be resolved relative to the current working directory."#,

      --venv-path <PATH>
          Path to the virtual environment the project uses.
          
          If provided, red-knot will use the `site-packages` directory of this virtual environment to resolve type information for the project's third-party dependencies.

      --typeshed-path <PATH>
          Custom directory to use for stdlib typeshed stubs

      --extra-search-path <PATH>
          Additional path to use as a module-resolution source (can be passed multiple times)

      --python-version <VERSION>
          Python version to assume when resolving types
          
          [possible values: 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, 3.13]

  -v, --verbose...
          Use verbose output (or `-vv` and `-vvv` for more verbose output)

  -W, --watch
          Run in watch mode by re-running whenever files change

  -h, --help
          Print help (see a summary with '-h')

  -V, --version
          Print version
```

Short help 

```
An extremely fast Python type checker.

Usage: red_knot [OPTIONS] [COMMAND]

Commands:
  server  Start the language server
  help    Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)

Options:
      --project <PROJECT>         Run the command within the given project directory
      --venv-path <PATH>          Path to the virtual environment the project uses
      --typeshed-path <PATH>      Custom directory to use for stdlib typeshed stubs
      --extra-search-path <PATH>  Additional path to use as a module-resolution source (can be passed multiple times)
      --python-version <VERSION>  Python version to assume when resolving types [possible values: 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, 3.13]
  -v, --verbose...                Use verbose output (or `-vv` and `-vvv` for more verbose output)
  -W, --watch                     Run in watch mode by re-running whenever files change
  -h, --help                      Print help (see more with '--help')
  -V, --version                   Print version

```

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2024-12-13 08:21:52 +00:00
David Peter d7ce548893
[red-knot] Add narrowing for 'while' loops (#14947)
## Summary

Add type narrowing for `while` loops and corresponding `else` branches.

closes #14861 

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests.
2024-12-13 07:40:14 +01:00
David Peter 657d26ff20
[red-knot] Tests for 'while' loop boundness (#14944)
## Summary

Regression test(s) for something that broken while implementing #14759.
We have similar tests for other control flow elements, but feel free to
let me know if this seems superfluous.

## Test Plan

New mdtests
2024-12-12 21:06:56 +01:00
Alex Waygood dbc191d2d6
[red-knot] Fixes to `Type::to_meta_type` (#14942) 2024-12-12 19:55:11 +00:00
Alex Waygood 71239f248e
[red-knot] Add explicit TODO branches for many typing special forms and qualifiers (#14936) 2024-12-12 17:57:26 +00:00
Alex Waygood 45b565cbb5
[red-knot] `Any` cannot be parameterized (#14933) 2024-12-12 11:50:34 +00:00
InSync e4885a2fb2
[red-knot] Understand `typing.Tuple` (#14927)
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2024-12-12 00:58:06 +00:00
David Peter a7e5e42b88
[red-knot] Make `attributes.md` test future-proof (#14923)
## Summary

Using `typing.LiteralString` breaks as soon as we understand
`sys.version_info` branches, as it's only available in 3.11 and later.

## Test Plan

Made sure it didn't fail on my #14759 branch anymore.
2024-12-11 20:46:24 +01:00
Alex Waygood c361cf66ad
[red-knot] Precise inference for `__class__` attributes on objects of all types (#14921) 2024-12-11 17:30:34 +00:00
Alex Waygood a54353392f
[red-knot] Add failing test for use of `type[]` as a base class (#14913)
We support using `typing.Type[]` as a base class (and we have tests for
it), but not yet `builtins.type[]`. At some point we should fix that,
but I don't think it';s worth spending much time on now (and it might be
easier once we've implemented generics?). This PR just adds a failing
test with a TODO.
2024-12-11 17:08:00 +00:00
InSync f30227c436
[red-knot] Understand `typing.Type` (#14904)
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2024-12-11 11:01:38 +00:00
Douglas Creager d4126f6049
Handle type[Any] correctly (#14876)
This adds support for `type[Any]`, which represents an unknown type (not
an instance of an unknown type), and `type`, which we are choosing to
interpret as `type[object]`.

Closes #14546
2024-12-10 16:12:37 -05:00
Micha Reiser 5fc8e5d80e
[red-knot] Add infrastructure to declare lints (#14873)
## Summary

This is the second PR out of three that adds support for
enabling/disabling lint rules in Red Knot. You may want to take a look
at the [first PR](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/14869) in this
stack to familiarize yourself with the used terminology.

This PR adds a new syntax to define a lint: 

```rust
declare_lint! {
    /// ## What it does
    /// Checks for references to names that are not defined.
    ///
    /// ## Why is this bad?
    /// Using an undefined variable will raise a `NameError` at runtime.
    ///
    /// ## Example
    ///
    /// ```python
    /// print(x)  # NameError: name 'x' is not defined
    /// ```
    pub(crate) static UNRESOLVED_REFERENCE = {
        summary: "detects references to names that are not defined",
        status: LintStatus::preview("1.0.0"),
        default_level: Level::Warn,
    }
}
```

A lint has a name and metadata about its status (preview, stable,
removed, deprecated), the default diagnostic level (unless the
configuration changes), and documentation. I use a macro here to derive
the kebab-case name and extract the documentation automatically.

This PR doesn't yet add any mechanism to discover all known lints. This
will be added in the next and last PR in this stack.


## Documentation
I documented some rules but then decided that it's probably not my best
use of time if I document all of them now (it also means that I play
catch-up with all of you forever). That's why I left some rules
undocumented (marked with TODO)

## Where is the best place to define all lints?

I'm not sure. I think what I have in this PR is fine but I also don't
love it because most lints are in a single place but not all of them. If
you have ideas, let me know.


## Why is the message not part of the lint, unlike Ruff's `Violation`

I understand that the main motivation for defining `message` on
`Violation` in Ruff is to remove the need to repeat the same message
over and over again. I'm not sure if this is an actual problem. Most
rules only emit a diagnostic in a single place and they commonly use
different messages if they emit diagnostics in different code paths,
requiring extra fields on the `Violation` struct.

That's why I'm not convinced that there's an actual need for it and
there are alternatives that can reduce the repetition when creating a
diagnostic:

* Create a helper function. We already do this in red knot with the
`add_xy` methods
* Create a custom `Diagnostic` implementation that tailors the entire
diagnostic and pre-codes e.g. the message

Avoiding an extra field on the `Violation` also removes the need to
allocate intermediate strings as it is commonly the place in Ruff.
Instead, Red Knot can use a borrowed string with `format_args`

## Test Plan

`cargo test`
2024-12-10 16:14:44 +00:00
InSync 15fe540251
Improve mdtests style (#14884)
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2024-12-10 13:05:51 +00:00
Alex Waygood ab26d9cf9a
[red-knot] Improve type inference for except handlers (#14838) 2024-12-09 22:49:58 +00:00
InSync 3865fb6641
[red-knot] Understanding `type[Union[A, B]]` (#14858)
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
2024-12-09 12:47:14 +00:00
Dimitri Papadopoulos Orfanos 59145098d6
Fix typos found by codespell (#14863)
## Summary

Just fix typos.

## Test Plan

CI tests.

---------

Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
2024-12-09 09:32:12 +00:00
Shaygan Hooshyari 269e47be96
Understand `type[A | B]` special form in annotations (#14830)
resolves https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/14703

I decided to use recursion to get the type, so if anything is added to
the single element inference it will be applied for the union.
Also added this
[change](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/14703#issuecomment-2510286217)
in this PR since it was easy.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2024-12-07 17:34:50 +00:00
Douglas Creager 8fdd88013d
Support `type[a.X]` with qualified class names (#14825)
This adds support for `type[a.X]`, where the `type` special form is
applied to a qualified name that resolves to a class literal. This works
for both nested classes and classes imported from another module.

Closes #14545
2024-12-06 17:14:51 -05:00
Carl Meyer 3017b3b687
[red-knot] function parameter types (#14802)
## Summary

Inferred and declared types for function parameters, in the function
body scope.

Fixes #13693.

## Test Plan

Added mdtests.

---------

Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2024-12-06 12:55:56 -08:00
David Peter 6b9f3d7d7c
[red-knot] Import `LiteralString`/`Never` from `typing_extensions` (#14817)
## Summary

`typing.Never` and `typing.LiteralString` are only conditionally
exported from `typing` for Python versions 3.11 and later. We run the
Markdown tests with the default Python version of 3.9, so here we change
the import to `typing_extensions` instead, and add a new test to make
sure we'll continue to understand the `typing`-version of these symbols
for newer versions.

This didn't cause problems so far, as we don't understand
`sys.version_info` branches yet.

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests to make sure this will continue to work in the
future.
2024-12-06 13:57:51 +01:00
Douglas Creager 918358aaa6
Migrate some inference tests to mdtests (#14795)
As part of #13696, this PR ports a smallish number of inference tests
over to the mdtest framework.
2024-12-06 11:19:22 +01:00
David Peter b01a651e69
[red-knot] Support for TOML configs in Markdown tests (#14785)
## Summary

This adds support for specifying the target Python version from a
Markdown test. It is a somewhat limited ad-hoc solution, but designed to
be future-compatible. TOML blocks can be added to arbitrary sections in
the Markdown block. They have the following format:

````markdown
```toml
[tool.knot.environment]
target-version = "3.13"
```
````

So far, there is nothing else that can be configured, but it should be
straightforward to extend this to things like a custom typeshed path.

This is in preparation for the statically-known branches feature where
we are going to have to specify the target version for lots of tests.

## Test Plan

- New Markdown test that fails without the explicitly specified
`target-version`.
- Manually tested various error paths when specifying a wrong
`target-version` field.
- Made sure that running tests is as fast as before.
2024-12-06 10:22:08 +01:00
Dhruv Manilawala 40b0b67dd9
[red-knot] Separate invalid syntax code snippets (#14803)
Ref: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/14788#discussion_r1872242283

This PR:
* Separates code snippets as individual tests for the invalid syntax
cases
* Adds a general comment explaining why the parser could emit more
syntax errors than expected
2024-12-06 02:41:33 +00:00
Dhruv Manilawala e9941cd714
[red-knot] Move standalone expr inference to `for` non-name target (#14788)
## Summary

Ref: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/14754#discussion_r1871040646

## Test Plan

Remove the TODO comment and update the mdtest.
2024-12-05 18:06:20 +05:30
Dhruv Manilawala 43bf1a8907
Add tests for "keyword as identifier" syntax errors (#14754)
## Summary

This is related to #13778, more specifically
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/13778#issuecomment-2513556004.

This PR adds various test cases where a keyword is being where an
identifier is expected. The tests are to make sure that red knot doesn't
panic, raises the syntax error and the identifier is added to the symbol
table. The final part allows editor related features like renaming the
symbol.
2024-12-05 17:32:48 +05:30
InSync 155d34bbb9
[red-knot] Infer precise types for `len()` calls (#14599)
## Summary

Resolves #14598.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2024-12-04 11:16:53 -08:00
Douglas Creager 8b23086eac
[red-knot] Add `typing.Any` as a spelling for the Any type (#14742)
We already had a representation for the Any type, which we would use
e.g. for expressions without type annotations. We now recognize
`typing.Any` as a way to refer to this type explicitly. Like other
special forms, this is tracked correctly through aliasing, and isn't
confused with local definitions that happen to have the same name.

Closes #14544
2024-12-04 09:56:36 -05:00
InSync 246a6df87d
[red-knot] Deeper understanding of `LiteralString` (#14649)
## Summary

Resolves #14648.

## Test Plan

Markdown tests.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2024-12-03 03:31:58 +00:00
Connor Skees 3e702e12f7
red-knot: support narrowing for bool(E) (#14668)
Resolves https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/14547 by delegating
narrowing to `E` for `bool(E)` where `E` is some expression.

This change does not include other builtin class constructors which
should also work in this position, like `int(..)` or `float(..)`, as the
original issue does not mention these. It should be easy enough to add
checks for these as well if we want to.

I don't see a lot of markdown tests for malformed input, maybe there's a
better place for the no args and too many args cases to go?

I did see after the fact that it looks like this task was intended for a
new hire.. my apologies. I got here from
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/13694, which is marked
help-wanted.

---------

Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
2024-12-03 03:04:59 +00:00
Samodya Abeysiriwardane 3f6c65e78c
[red-knot] Fix merged type after if-else without explicit else branch (#14621)
## Summary

Closes: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/14593

The final type of a variable after if-statement without explicit else
branch should be similar to having an explicit else branch.

## Test Plan

Originally failed test cases from the bug are added.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2024-11-28 06:23:55 -08:00
David Peter a378ff38dc
[red-knot] Fix Boolean flags in mdtests (#14654)
## Summary

Similar to #14652, but now with conditions that are `Literal[True]`
(instead of `Literal[False]`), where we want them to be `bool`.
2024-11-28 14:29:35 +01:00
David Peter 6f1cf5b686
[red-knot] Minor fix in MRO tests (#14652)
## Summary

`bool()` is equal to `False`, and we infer `Literal[False]` for it. Which
means that the test here will fail as soon as we treat the body of
this `if` as unreachable.
2024-11-28 10:17:15 +01:00
Shaygan Hooshyari 557d583e32
Support `typing.NoReturn` and `typing.Never` (#14559)
Fix #14558 
## Summary

- Add `typing.NoReturn` and `typing.Never` to known instances and infer
them as `Type::Never`
- Add `is_assignable_to` cases for `Type::Never`

I skipped emitting diagnostic for when a function is annotated as
`NoReturn` but it actually returns.

## Test Plan

Added tests from

https://github.com/python/typing/blob/main/conformance/tests/specialtypes_never.py
except from generics and checking if the return value of the function
and the annotations match.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2024-11-25 21:37:55 +00:00
cake-monotone f98eebdbab
[red-knot] Fix Leaking Narrowing Constraint in `ast::ExprIf` (#14590)
## Summary

Closes #14588


```py
x: Literal[42, "hello"] = 42 if bool_instance() else "hello"
reveal_type(x)  # revealed: Literal[42] | Literal["hello"]

_ = ... if isinstance(x, str) else ...

# The `isinstance` test incorrectly narrows the type of `x`.
# As a result, `x` is revealed as Literal["hello"], but it should remain Literal[42, "hello"].
reveal_type(x)  # revealed: Literal["hello"]
```

## Test Plan
mdtest included!

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2024-11-25 10:36:37 -08:00
Dhruv Manilawala 5a30ec0df6
Avoid inferring invalid expr types for string annotation (#14447)
## Summary

fixes: #14440

## Test Plan

Add a test case with all the invalid expressions in a string annotation
context.
2024-11-25 21:27:03 +05:30
Carl Meyer 4ba847f250
[red-knot] remove wrong typevar attribute implementations (#14540) 2024-11-22 13:17:16 -08:00
David Peter f6b2cd5588
[red-knot] Semantic index: handle invalid `break`s (#14522)
## Summary

This fix addresses panics related to invalid syntax like the following
where a `break` statement is used in a nested definition inside a
loop:

```py
while True:

    def b():
        x: int

        break
```

closes #14342

## Test Plan

* New corpus regression tests.
* New unit test to make sure we handle nested while loops correctly.
This test is passing on `main`, but can easily fail if the
`is_inside_loop` state isn't properly saved/restored.
2024-11-22 13:13:55 +01:00
David Peter a90e404c3f
[red-knot] PEP 695 type aliases (#14357)
## Summary

Add support for (non-generic) type aliases. The main motivation behind
this was to get rid of panics involving expressions in (generic) type
aliases. But it turned out the best way to fix it was to implement
(partial) support for type aliases.

```py
type IntOrStr = int | str

reveal_type(IntOrStr)  # revealed: typing.TypeAliasType
reveal_type(IntOrStr.__name__)  # revealed: Literal["IntOrStr"]

x: IntOrStr = 1

reveal_type(x)  # revealed: Literal[1]

def f() -> None:
    reveal_type(x)  # revealed: int | str
```

## Test Plan

- Updated corpus test allow list to reflect that we don't panic anymore.
- Added Markdown-based test for type aliases (`type_alias.md`)
2024-11-22 08:47:14 +01:00
David Peter 47f39ed1a0
[red-knot] Meta data for `Type::Todo` (#14500)
## Summary

Adds meta information to `Type::Todo`, allowing developers to easily
trace back the origin of a particular `@Todo` type they encounter.

Instead of `Type::Todo`, we now write either `type_todo!()` which
creates a `@Todo[path/to/source.rs:123]` type with file and line
information, or using `type_todo!("PEP 604 unions not supported")`,
which creates a variant with a custom message.

`Type::Todo` now contains a `TodoType` field. In release mode, this is
just a zero-sized struct, in order not to create any overhead. In debug
mode, this is an `enum` that contains the meta information.

`Type` implements `Copy`, which means that `TodoType` also needs to be
copyable. This limits the design space. We could intern `TodoType`, but
I discarded this option, as it would require us to have access to the
salsa DB everywhere we want to use `Type::Todo`. And it would have made
the macro invocations less ergonomic (requiring us to pass `db`).

So for now, the meta information is simply a `&'static str` / `u32` for
the file/line variant, or a `&'static str` for the custom message.
Anything involving a chain/backtrace of several `@Todo`s or similar is
therefore currently not implemented. Also because we currently don't see
any direct use cases for this, and because all of this will eventually
go away.

Note that the size of `Type` increases from 16 to 24 bytes, but only in
debug mode.

## Test Plan

- Observed the changes in Markdown tests.
- Added custom messages for all `Type::Todo`s that were revealed in the
tests
- Ran red knot in release and debug mode on the following Python file:
  ```py
  def f(x: int) -> int:
      reveal_type(x)
  ```
Prints `@Todo` in release mode and `@Todo(function parameter type)` in
debug mode.
2024-11-21 09:59:47 +01:00
Shaygan Hooshyari aecdb8c144
[red-knot] support `typing.Union` in type annotations (#14499)
Fix #14498

## Summary

This PR adds `typing.Union` support

## Test Plan

I created new tests in mdtest.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
2024-11-20 21:55:33 +00:00
cake-monotone 6a4d207db7
[red-knot] Refactoring the inference logic of lexicographic comparisons (#14422)
## Summary

closes #14279

### Limitations of the Current Implementation
#### Incorrect Error Propagation

In the current implementation of lexicographic comparisons, if the
result of an Eq operation is Ambiguous, the comparison stops
immediately, returning a bool instance. While this may yield correct
inferences, it fails to capture unsupported-operation errors that might
occur in subsequent comparisons.
```py
class A: ...

(int_instance(), A()) < (int_instance(), A())  # should error
```

#### Weak Inference in Specific Cases

> Example: `(int_instance(), "foo") == (int_instance(), "bar")`
> Current result: `bool`
> Expected result: `Literal[False]`

`Eq` and `NotEq` have unique behavior in lexicographic comparisons
compared to other operators. Specifically:
- For `Eq`, if any non-equal pair exists within the tuples being
compared, we can immediately conclude that the tuples are not equal.
- For `NotEq`, if any equal pair exists, we can conclude that the tuples
are unequal.

```py
a = (str_instance(), int_instance(), "foo")

reveal_type(a == a)  # revealed: bool
reveal_type(a != a)  # revealed: bool

b = (str_instance(), int_instance(), "bar")

reveal_type(a == b)  # revealed: bool  # should be Literal[False]
reveal_type(a != b)  # revealed: bool  # should be Literal[True]
```
#### Incorrect Support for Non-Boolean Rich Comparisons

In CPython, aside from `==` and `!=`, tuple comparisons return a
non-boolean result as-is. Tuples do not convert the value into `bool`.

Note: If all pairwise `==` comparisons between elements in the tuples
return Truthy, the comparison then considers the tuples' lengths.
Regardless of the return type of the dunder methods, the final result
can still be a boolean.

```py
from __future__ import annotations

class A:
    def __eq__(self, o: object) -> str:
        return "hello"

    def __ne__(self, o: object) -> bytes:
        return b"world"

    def __lt__(self, o: A) -> float:
        return 3.14

a = (A(), A())

reveal_type(a == a)  # revealed: bool
reveal_type(a != a)  # revealed: bool
reveal_type(a < a)  # revealed: bool # should be: `float | Literal[False]`

```

### Key Changes
One of the major changes is that comparisons no longer end with a `bool`
result when a pairwise `Eq` result is `Ambiguous`. Instead, the function
attempts to infer all possible cases and unions the results. This
improvement allows for more robust type inference and better error
detection.

Additionally, as the function is now optimized for tuple comparisons,
the name has been changed from the more general
`infer_lexicographic_comparison` to `infer_tuple_rich_comparison`.

## Test Plan

mdtest included
2024-11-19 17:32:43 -08:00
David Peter d8538d8c98
[red-knot] Narrowing for `type(x) is C` checks (#14432)
## Summary

Add type narrowing for `type(x) is C` conditions (and `else` clauses of
`type(x) is not C` conditionals):

```py
if type(x) is A:
    reveal_type(x)  # revealed: A
else:
    reveal_type(x)  # revealed: A | B
```

closes: #14431, part of: #13694

## Test Plan

New Markdown-based tests.
2024-11-18 16:21:46 +01:00
David Peter d81b6cd334
[red-knot] Types for subexpressions of annotations (#14426)
## Summary

This patches up various missing paths where sub-expressions of type
annotations previously had no type attached. Examples include:
```py
tuple[int, str]
#     ~~~~~~~~

type[MyClass]
#    ~~~~~~~

Literal["foo"]
#       ~~~~~

Literal["foo", Literal[1, 2]]
#              ~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Literal[1, "a", random.illegal(sub[expr + ession])]
#               ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```

## Test Plan

```
cargo nextest run -p red_knot_workspace -- --ignored linter_af linter_gz
```
2024-11-18 13:03:27 +01:00
Micha Reiser d99210c049
[red-knot] Default to python 3.9 (#14429) 2024-11-18 11:27:40 +00:00
Shaygan Hooshyari ff19629b11
Understand `typing.Optional` in annotations (#14397) 2024-11-17 17:04:58 +00:00
Dhruv Manilawala 9ec690b8f8
[red-knot] Add support for string annotations (#14151)
## Summary

This PR adds support for parsing and inferring types within string
annotations.

### Implementation (attempt 1)

This is preserved in
6217f48924.

The implementation here would separate the inference of string
annotations in the deferred query. This requires the following:
* Two ways of evaluating the deferred definitions - lazily and eagerly. 
* An eager evaluation occurs right outside the definition query which in
this case would be in `binding_ty` and `declaration_ty`.
* A lazy evaluation occurs on demand like using the
`definition_expression_ty` to determine the function return type and
class bases.
* The above point means that when trying to get the binding type for a
variable in an annotated assignment, the definition query won't include
the type. So, it'll require going through the deferred query to get the
type.

This has the following limitations:
* Nested string annotations, although not necessarily a useful feature,
is difficult to implement unless we convert the implementation in an
infinite loop
* Partial string annotations require complex layout because inferring
the types for stringified and non-stringified parts of the annotation
are done in separate queries. This means we need to maintain additional
information

### Implementation (attempt 2)

This is the final diff in this PR.

The implementation here does the complete inference of string annotation
in the same definition query by maintaining certain state while trying
to infer different parts of an expression and take decisions
accordingly. These are:
* Allow names that are part of a string annotation to not exists in the
symbol table. For example, in `x: "Foo"`, if the "Foo" symbol is not
defined then it won't exists in the symbol table even though it's being
used. This is an invariant which is being allowed only for symbols in a
string annotation.
* Similarly, lookup name is updated to do the same and if the symbol
doesn't exists, then it's not bounded.
* Store the final type of a string annotation on the string expression
itself and not for any of the sub-expressions that are created after
parsing. This is because those sub-expressions won't exists in the
semantic index.

Design document:
https://www.notion.so/astral-sh/String-Annotations-12148797e1ca801197a9f146641e5b71?pvs=4

Closes: #13796 

## Test Plan

* Add various test cases in our markdown framework
* Run `red_knot` on LibCST (contains a lot of string annotations,
specifically
https://github.com/Instagram/LibCST/blob/main/libcst/matchers/_matcher_base.py),
FastAPI (good amount of annotated code including `typing.Literal`) and
compare against the `main` branch output
2024-11-15 04:10:18 +00:00