xref: /third_party/python/Doc/library/typing.rst (revision 7db96d56)
17db96d56Sopenharmony_ci========================================
27db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:mod:`typing` --- Support for type hints
37db96d56Sopenharmony_ci========================================
47db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
57db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. module:: typing
67db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :synopsis: Support for type hints (see :pep:`484`).
77db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
87db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. versionadded:: 3.5
97db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci**Source code:** :source:`Lib/typing.py`
117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. note::
137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The Python runtime does not enforce function and variable type annotations.
157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   They can be used by third party tools such as type checkers, IDEs, linters,
167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   etc.
177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci--------------
197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
207db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThis module provides runtime support for type hints. The most fundamental
217db96d56Sopenharmony_cisupport consists of the types :data:`Any`, :data:`Union`, :data:`Callable`,
227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:class:`TypeVar`, and :class:`Generic`. For a specification, please see
237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:pep:`484`. For a simplified introduction to type hints, see :pep:`483`.
247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
267db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe function below takes and returns a string and is annotated as follows::
277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def greeting(name: str) -> str:
297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       return 'Hello ' + name
307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
317db96d56Sopenharmony_ciIn the function ``greeting``, the argument ``name`` is expected to be of type
327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:class:`str` and the return type :class:`str`. Subtypes are accepted as
337db96d56Sopenharmony_ciarguments.
347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
357db96d56Sopenharmony_ciNew features are frequently added to the ``typing`` module.
367db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe `typing_extensions <https://pypi.org/project/typing-extensions/>`_ package
377db96d56Sopenharmony_ciprovides backports of these new features to older versions of Python.
387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
397db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFor a summary of deprecated features and a deprecation timeline, please see
407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci`Deprecation Timeline of Major Features`_.
417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. seealso::
437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For a quick overview of type hints, refer to
457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   `this cheat sheet <https://mypy.readthedocs.io/en/stable/cheat_sheet_py3.html>`_.
467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The "Type System Reference" section of https://mypy.readthedocs.io/ -- since
487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   the Python typing system is standardised via PEPs, this reference should
497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   broadly apply to most Python type checkers, although some parts may still be
507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   specific to mypy.
517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The documentation at https://typing.readthedocs.io/ serves as useful reference
537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   for type system features, useful typing related tools and typing best practices.
547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. _relevant-peps:
567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
577db96d56Sopenharmony_ciRelevant PEPs
587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci=============
597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
607db96d56Sopenharmony_ciSince the initial introduction of type hints in :pep:`484` and :pep:`483`, a
617db96d56Sopenharmony_cinumber of PEPs have modified and enhanced Python's framework for type
627db96d56Sopenharmony_ciannotations. These include:
637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`526`: Syntax for Variable Annotations
657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* syntax for annotating variables outside of function
667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     definitions, and :data:`ClassVar`
677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`544`: Protocols: Structural subtyping (static duck typing)
687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* :class:`Protocol` and the
697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     :func:`@runtime_checkable<runtime_checkable>` decorator
707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`585`: Type Hinting Generics In Standard Collections
717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* :class:`types.GenericAlias` and the ability to use standard
727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     library classes as :ref:`generic types<types-genericalias>`
737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`586`: Literal Types
747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* :data:`Literal`
757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`589`: TypedDict: Type Hints for Dictionaries with a Fixed Set of Keys
767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* :class:`TypedDict`
777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`591`: Adding a final qualifier to typing
787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* :data:`Final` and the :func:`@final<final>` decorator
797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`593`: Flexible function and variable annotations
807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* :data:`Annotated`
817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`604`: Allow writing union types as ``X | Y``
827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* :data:`types.UnionType` and the ability to use
837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     the binary-or operator ``|`` to signify a
847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     :ref:`union of types<types-union>`
857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`612`: Parameter Specification Variables
867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* :class:`ParamSpec` and :data:`Concatenate`
877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`613`: Explicit Type Aliases
887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* :data:`TypeAlias`
897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`646`: Variadic Generics
907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* :data:`TypeVarTuple`
917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`647`: User-Defined Type Guards
927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* :data:`TypeGuard`
937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`655`: Marking individual TypedDict items as required or potentially missing
947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     *Introducing* :data:`Required` and :data:`NotRequired`
957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`673`: Self type
967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    *Introducing* :data:`Self`
977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`675`: Arbitrary Literal String Type
987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    *Introducing* :data:`LiteralString`
997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* :pep:`681`: Data Class Transforms
1007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    *Introducing* the :func:`@dataclass_transform<dataclass_transform>` decorator
1017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. _type-aliases:
1037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1047db96d56Sopenharmony_ciType aliases
1057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci============
1067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1077db96d56Sopenharmony_ciA type alias is defined by assigning the type to the alias. In this example,
1087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci``Vector`` and ``list[float]`` will be treated as interchangeable synonyms::
1097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Vector = list[float]
1117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def scale(scalar: float, vector: Vector) -> Vector:
1137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       return [scalar * num for num in vector]
1147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   # passes type checking; a list of floats qualifies as a Vector.
1167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   new_vector = scale(2.0, [1.0, -4.2, 5.4])
1177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1187db96d56Sopenharmony_ciType aliases are useful for simplifying complex type signatures. For example::
1197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from collections.abc import Sequence
1217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ConnectionOptions = dict[str, str]
1237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Address = tuple[str, int]
1247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Server = tuple[Address, ConnectionOptions]
1257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def broadcast_message(message: str, servers: Sequence[Server]) -> None:
1277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
1287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   # The static type checker will treat the previous type signature as
1307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   # being exactly equivalent to this one.
1317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def broadcast_message(
1327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           message: str,
1337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           servers: Sequence[tuple[tuple[str, int], dict[str, str]]]) -> None:
1347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
1357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1367db96d56Sopenharmony_ciNote that ``None`` as a type hint is a special case and is replaced by
1377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci``type(None)``.
1387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1397db96d56Sopenharmony_ciType aliases may be marked with :data:`TypeAlias` to make it explicit that
1407db96d56Sopenharmony_cithe statement is a type alias declaration, not a normal variable assignment::
1417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from typing import TypeAlias
1437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Vector: TypeAlias = list[float]
1457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. _distinct:
1477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1487db96d56Sopenharmony_ciNewType
1497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci=======
1507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1517db96d56Sopenharmony_ciUse the :class:`NewType` helper to create distinct types::
1527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from typing import NewType
1547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   UserId = NewType('UserId', int)
1567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   some_id = UserId(524313)
1577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1587db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe static type checker will treat the new type as if it were a subclass
1597db96d56Sopenharmony_ciof the original type. This is useful in helping catch logical errors::
1607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def get_user_name(user_id: UserId) -> str:
1627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
1637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   # passes type checking
1657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   user_a = get_user_name(UserId(42351))
1667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   # fails type checking; an int is not a UserId
1687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   user_b = get_user_name(-1)
1697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1707db96d56Sopenharmony_ciYou may still perform all ``int`` operations on a variable of type ``UserId``,
1717db96d56Sopenharmony_cibut the result will always be of type ``int``. This lets you pass in a
1727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci``UserId`` wherever an ``int`` might be expected, but will prevent you from
1737db96d56Sopenharmony_ciaccidentally creating a ``UserId`` in an invalid way::
1747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   # 'output' is of type 'int', not 'UserId'
1767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   output = UserId(23413) + UserId(54341)
1777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1787db96d56Sopenharmony_ciNote that these checks are enforced only by the static type checker. At runtime,
1797db96d56Sopenharmony_cithe statement ``Derived = NewType('Derived', Base)`` will make ``Derived`` a
1807db96d56Sopenharmony_cicallable that immediately returns whatever parameter you pass it. That means
1817db96d56Sopenharmony_cithe expression ``Derived(some_value)`` does not create a new class or introduce
1827db96d56Sopenharmony_cimuch overhead beyond that of a regular function call.
1837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1847db96d56Sopenharmony_ciMore precisely, the expression ``some_value is Derived(some_value)`` is always
1857db96d56Sopenharmony_citrue at runtime.
1867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1877db96d56Sopenharmony_ciIt is invalid to create a subtype of ``Derived``::
1887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from typing import NewType
1907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   UserId = NewType('UserId', int)
1927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   # Fails at runtime and does not pass type checking
1947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   class AdminUserId(UserId): pass
1957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1967db96d56Sopenharmony_ciHowever, it is possible to create a :class:`NewType` based on a 'derived' ``NewType``::
1977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
1987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from typing import NewType
1997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   UserId = NewType('UserId', int)
2017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ProUserId = NewType('ProUserId', UserId)
2037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2047db96d56Sopenharmony_ciand typechecking for ``ProUserId`` will work as expected.
2057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2067db96d56Sopenharmony_ciSee :pep:`484` for more details.
2077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. note::
2097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Recall that the use of a type alias declares two types to be *equivalent* to
2117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   one another. Doing ``Alias = Original`` will make the static type checker
2127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   treat ``Alias`` as being *exactly equivalent* to ``Original`` in all cases.
2137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This is useful when you want to simplify complex type signatures.
2147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   In contrast, ``NewType`` declares one type to be a *subtype* of another.
2167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Doing ``Derived = NewType('Derived', Original)`` will make the static type
2177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   checker treat ``Derived`` as a *subclass* of ``Original``, which means a
2187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   value of type ``Original`` cannot be used in places where a value of type
2197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Derived`` is expected. This is useful when you want to prevent logic
2207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   errors with minimal runtime cost.
2217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. versionadded:: 3.5.2
2237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. versionchanged:: 3.10
2257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``NewType`` is now a class rather than a function.  There is some additional
2267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   runtime cost when calling ``NewType`` over a regular function.  However, this
2277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   cost will be reduced in 3.11.0.
2287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2307db96d56Sopenharmony_ciCallable
2317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci========
2327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2337db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFrameworks expecting callback functions of specific signatures might be
2347db96d56Sopenharmony_citype hinted using ``Callable[[Arg1Type, Arg2Type], ReturnType]``.
2357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2367db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFor example::
2377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from collections.abc import Callable
2397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def feeder(get_next_item: Callable[[], str]) -> None:
2417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       # Body
2427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def async_query(on_success: Callable[[int], None],
2447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci                   on_error: Callable[[int, Exception], None]) -> None:
2457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       # Body
2467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   async def on_update(value: str) -> None:
2487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       # Body
2497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   callback: Callable[[str], Awaitable[None]] = on_update
2507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2517db96d56Sopenharmony_ciIt is possible to declare the return type of a callable without specifying
2527db96d56Sopenharmony_cithe call signature by substituting a literal ellipsis
2537db96d56Sopenharmony_cifor the list of arguments in the type hint: ``Callable[..., ReturnType]``.
2547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2557db96d56Sopenharmony_ciCallables which take other callables as arguments may indicate that their
2567db96d56Sopenharmony_ciparameter types are dependent on each other using :class:`ParamSpec`.
2577db96d56Sopenharmony_ciAdditionally, if that callable adds or removes arguments from other
2587db96d56Sopenharmony_cicallables, the :data:`Concatenate` operator may be used.  They
2597db96d56Sopenharmony_citake the form ``Callable[ParamSpecVariable, ReturnType]`` and
2607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci``Callable[Concatenate[Arg1Type, Arg2Type, ..., ParamSpecVariable], ReturnType]``
2617db96d56Sopenharmony_cirespectively.
2627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. versionchanged:: 3.10
2647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Callable`` now supports :class:`ParamSpec` and :data:`Concatenate`.
2657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :pep:`612` for more details.
2667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. seealso::
2687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The documentation for :class:`ParamSpec` and :class:`Concatenate` provides
2697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   examples of usage in ``Callable``.
2707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. _generics:
2727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2737db96d56Sopenharmony_ciGenerics
2747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci========
2757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2767db96d56Sopenharmony_ciSince type information about objects kept in containers cannot be statically
2777db96d56Sopenharmony_ciinferred in a generic way, abstract base classes have been extended to support
2787db96d56Sopenharmony_cisubscription to denote expected types for container elements.
2797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci::
2817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from collections.abc import Mapping, Sequence
2837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def notify_by_email(employees: Sequence[Employee],
2857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci                       overrides: Mapping[str, str]) -> None: ...
2867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2877db96d56Sopenharmony_ciGenerics can be parameterized by using a factory available in typing
2887db96d56Sopenharmony_cicalled :class:`TypeVar`.
2897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci::
2917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from collections.abc import Sequence
2937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from typing import TypeVar
2947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   T = TypeVar('T')      # Declare type variable
2967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
2977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def first(l: Sequence[T]) -> T:   # Generic function
2987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       return l[0]
2997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. _user-defined-generics:
3017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3027db96d56Sopenharmony_ciUser-defined generic types
3037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci==========================
3047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3057db96d56Sopenharmony_ciA user-defined class can be defined as a generic class.
3067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci::
3087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from typing import TypeVar, Generic
3107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from logging import Logger
3117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   T = TypeVar('T')
3137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   class LoggedVar(Generic[T]):
3157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       def __init__(self, value: T, name: str, logger: Logger) -> None:
3167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           self.name = name
3177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           self.logger = logger
3187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           self.value = value
3197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       def set(self, new: T) -> None:
3217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           self.log('Set ' + repr(self.value))
3227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           self.value = new
3237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       def get(self) -> T:
3257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           self.log('Get ' + repr(self.value))
3267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           return self.value
3277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       def log(self, message: str) -> None:
3297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           self.logger.info('%s: %s', self.name, message)
3307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci``Generic[T]`` as a base class defines that the class ``LoggedVar`` takes a
3327db96d56Sopenharmony_cisingle type parameter ``T`` . This also makes ``T`` valid as a type within the
3337db96d56Sopenharmony_ciclass body.
3347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3357db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe :class:`Generic` base class defines :meth:`~object.__class_getitem__` so
3367db96d56Sopenharmony_cithat ``LoggedVar[T]`` is valid as a type::
3377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from collections.abc import Iterable
3397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def zero_all_vars(vars: Iterable[LoggedVar[int]]) -> None:
3417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       for var in vars:
3427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           var.set(0)
3437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3447db96d56Sopenharmony_ciA generic type can have any number of type variables. All varieties of
3457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:class:`TypeVar` are permissible as parameters for a generic type::
3467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from typing import TypeVar, Generic, Sequence
3487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   T = TypeVar('T', contravariant=True)
3507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   B = TypeVar('B', bound=Sequence[bytes], covariant=True)
3517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   S = TypeVar('S', int, str)
3527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   class WeirdTrio(Generic[T, B, S]):
3547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
3557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3567db96d56Sopenharmony_ciEach type variable argument to :class:`Generic` must be distinct.
3577db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThis is thus invalid::
3587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from typing import TypeVar, Generic
3607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ...
3617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   T = TypeVar('T')
3637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   class Pair(Generic[T, T]):   # INVALID
3657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
3667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3677db96d56Sopenharmony_ciYou can use multiple inheritance with :class:`Generic`::
3687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from collections.abc import Sized
3707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from typing import TypeVar, Generic
3717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   T = TypeVar('T')
3737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   class LinkedList(Sized, Generic[T]):
3757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
3767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3777db96d56Sopenharmony_ciWhen inheriting from generic classes, some type parameters could be fixed::
3787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from collections.abc import Mapping
3807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from typing import TypeVar
3817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   T = TypeVar('T')
3837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   class MyDict(Mapping[str, T]):
3857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
3867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3877db96d56Sopenharmony_ciIn this case ``MyDict`` has a single parameter, ``T``.
3887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3897db96d56Sopenharmony_ciUsing a generic class without specifying type parameters assumes
3907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:data:`Any` for each position. In the following example, ``MyIterable`` is
3917db96d56Sopenharmony_cinot generic but implicitly inherits from ``Iterable[Any]``::
3927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from collections.abc import Iterable
3947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   class MyIterable(Iterable): # Same as Iterable[Any]
3967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3977db96d56Sopenharmony_ciUser-defined generic type aliases are also supported. Examples::
3987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
3997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from collections.abc import Iterable
4007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from typing import TypeVar
4017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   S = TypeVar('S')
4027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Response = Iterable[S] | int
4037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   # Return type here is same as Iterable[str] | int
4057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def response(query: str) -> Response[str]:
4067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
4077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   T = TypeVar('T', int, float, complex)
4097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Vec = Iterable[tuple[T, T]]
4107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def inproduct(v: Vec[T]) -> T: # Same as Iterable[tuple[T, T]]
4127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       return sum(x*y for x, y in v)
4137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. versionchanged:: 3.7
4157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    :class:`Generic` no longer has a custom metaclass.
4167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4177db96d56Sopenharmony_ciUser-defined generics for parameter expressions are also supported via parameter
4187db96d56Sopenharmony_cispecification variables in the form ``Generic[P]``.  The behavior is consistent
4197db96d56Sopenharmony_ciwith type variables' described above as parameter specification variables are
4207db96d56Sopenharmony_citreated by the typing module as a specialized type variable.  The one exception
4217db96d56Sopenharmony_cito this is that a list of types can be used to substitute a :class:`ParamSpec`::
4227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   >>> from typing import Generic, ParamSpec, TypeVar
4247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   >>> T = TypeVar('T')
4267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   >>> P = ParamSpec('P')
4277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   >>> class Z(Generic[T, P]): ...
4297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ...
4307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   >>> Z[int, [dict, float]]
4317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   __main__.Z[int, (<class 'dict'>, <class 'float'>)]
4327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4337db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFurthermore, a generic with only one parameter specification variable will accept
4347db96d56Sopenharmony_ciparameter lists in the forms ``X[[Type1, Type2, ...]]`` and also
4357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci``X[Type1, Type2, ...]`` for aesthetic reasons.  Internally, the latter is converted
4367db96d56Sopenharmony_cito the former, so the following are equivalent::
4377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   >>> class X(Generic[P]): ...
4397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ...
4407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   >>> X[int, str]
4417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   __main__.X[(<class 'int'>, <class 'str'>)]
4427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   >>> X[[int, str]]
4437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   __main__.X[(<class 'int'>, <class 'str'>)]
4447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4457db96d56Sopenharmony_ciDo note that generics with :class:`ParamSpec` may not have correct
4467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci``__parameters__`` after substitution in some cases because they
4477db96d56Sopenharmony_ciare intended primarily for static type checking.
4487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. versionchanged:: 3.10
4507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :class:`Generic` can now be parameterized over parameter expressions.
4517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :class:`ParamSpec` and :pep:`612` for more details.
4527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4537db96d56Sopenharmony_ciA user-defined generic class can have ABCs as base classes without a metaclass
4547db96d56Sopenharmony_ciconflict. Generic metaclasses are not supported. The outcome of parameterizing
4557db96d56Sopenharmony_cigenerics is cached, and most types in the typing module are :term:`hashable` and
4567db96d56Sopenharmony_cicomparable for equality.
4577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4597db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe :data:`Any` type
4607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci====================
4617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4627db96d56Sopenharmony_ciA special kind of type is :data:`Any`. A static type checker will treat
4637db96d56Sopenharmony_cievery type as being compatible with :data:`Any` and :data:`Any` as being
4647db96d56Sopenharmony_cicompatible with every type.
4657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4667db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThis means that it is possible to perform any operation or method call on a
4677db96d56Sopenharmony_civalue of type :data:`Any` and assign it to any variable::
4687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from typing import Any
4707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   a: Any = None
4727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   a = []          # OK
4737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   a = 2           # OK
4747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   s: str = ''
4767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   s = a           # OK
4777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def foo(item: Any) -> int:
4797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       # Passes type checking; 'item' could be any type,
4807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       # and that type might have a 'bar' method
4817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       item.bar()
4827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
4837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4847db96d56Sopenharmony_ciNotice that no type checking is performed when assigning a value of type
4857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:data:`Any` to a more precise type. For example, the static type checker did
4867db96d56Sopenharmony_cinot report an error when assigning ``a`` to ``s`` even though ``s`` was
4877db96d56Sopenharmony_cideclared to be of type :class:`str` and receives an :class:`int` value at
4887db96d56Sopenharmony_ciruntime!
4897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4907db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFurthermore, all functions without a return type or parameter types will
4917db96d56Sopenharmony_ciimplicitly default to using :data:`Any`::
4927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def legacy_parser(text):
4947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
4957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       return data
4967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
4977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   # A static type checker will treat the above
4987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   # as having the same signature as:
4997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def legacy_parser(text: Any) -> Any:
5007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
5017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       return data
5027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5037db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThis behavior allows :data:`Any` to be used as an *escape hatch* when you
5047db96d56Sopenharmony_cineed to mix dynamically and statically typed code.
5057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5067db96d56Sopenharmony_ciContrast the behavior of :data:`Any` with the behavior of :class:`object`.
5077db96d56Sopenharmony_ciSimilar to :data:`Any`, every type is a subtype of :class:`object`. However,
5087db96d56Sopenharmony_ciunlike :data:`Any`, the reverse is not true: :class:`object` is *not* a
5097db96d56Sopenharmony_cisubtype of every other type.
5107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5117db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThat means when the type of a value is :class:`object`, a type checker will
5127db96d56Sopenharmony_cireject almost all operations on it, and assigning it to a variable (or using
5137db96d56Sopenharmony_ciit as a return value) of a more specialized type is a type error. For example::
5147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def hash_a(item: object) -> int:
5167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       # Fails type checking; an object does not have a 'magic' method.
5177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       item.magic()
5187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
5197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def hash_b(item: Any) -> int:
5217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       # Passes type checking
5227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       item.magic()
5237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
5247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   # Passes type checking, since ints and strs are subclasses of object
5267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   hash_a(42)
5277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   hash_a("foo")
5287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   # Passes type checking, since Any is compatible with all types
5307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   hash_b(42)
5317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   hash_b("foo")
5327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5337db96d56Sopenharmony_ciUse :class:`object` to indicate that a value could be any type in a typesafe
5347db96d56Sopenharmony_cimanner. Use :data:`Any` to indicate that a value is dynamically typed.
5357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5377db96d56Sopenharmony_ciNominal vs structural subtyping
5387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci===============================
5397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5407db96d56Sopenharmony_ciInitially :pep:`484` defined the Python static type system as using
5417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci*nominal subtyping*. This means that a class ``A`` is allowed where
5427db96d56Sopenharmony_cia class ``B`` is expected if and only if ``A`` is a subclass of ``B``.
5437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5447db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThis requirement previously also applied to abstract base classes, such as
5457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:class:`~collections.abc.Iterable`. The problem with this approach is that a class had
5467db96d56Sopenharmony_cito be explicitly marked to support them, which is unpythonic and unlike
5477db96d56Sopenharmony_ciwhat one would normally do in idiomatic dynamically typed Python code.
5487db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFor example, this conforms to :pep:`484`::
5497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from collections.abc import Sized, Iterable, Iterator
5517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   class Bucket(Sized, Iterable[int]):
5537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
5547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       def __len__(self) -> int: ...
5557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       def __iter__(self) -> Iterator[int]: ...
5567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:pep:`544` allows to solve this problem by allowing users to write
5587db96d56Sopenharmony_cithe above code without explicit base classes in the class definition,
5597db96d56Sopenharmony_ciallowing ``Bucket`` to be implicitly considered a subtype of both ``Sized``
5607db96d56Sopenharmony_ciand ``Iterable[int]`` by static type checkers. This is known as
5617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci*structural subtyping* (or static duck-typing)::
5627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   from collections.abc import Iterator, Iterable
5647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   class Bucket:  # Note: no base classes
5667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ...
5677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       def __len__(self) -> int: ...
5687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       def __iter__(self) -> Iterator[int]: ...
5697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   def collect(items: Iterable[int]) -> int: ...
5717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   result = collect(Bucket())  # Passes type check
5727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5737db96d56Sopenharmony_ciMoreover, by subclassing a special class :class:`Protocol`, a user
5747db96d56Sopenharmony_cican define new custom protocols to fully enjoy structural subtyping
5757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci(see examples below).
5767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5777db96d56Sopenharmony_ciModule contents
5787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci===============
5797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5807db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe module defines the following classes, functions and decorators.
5817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. note::
5837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This module defines several types that are subclasses of pre-existing
5857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   standard library classes which also extend :class:`Generic`
5867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   to support type variables inside ``[]``.
5877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   These types became redundant in Python 3.9 when the
5887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   corresponding pre-existing classes were enhanced to support ``[]``.
5897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The redundant types are deprecated as of Python 3.9 but no
5917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   deprecation warnings will be issued by the interpreter.
5927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   It is expected that type checkers will flag the deprecated types
5937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   when the checked program targets Python 3.9 or newer.
5947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The deprecated types will be removed from the :mod:`typing` module
5967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   no sooner than the first Python version released 5 years after the release of Python 3.9.0.
5977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See details in :pep:`585`—*Type Hinting Generics In Standard Collections*.
5987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
5997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6007db96d56Sopenharmony_ciSpecial typing primitives
6017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci-------------------------
6027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6037db96d56Sopenharmony_ciSpecial types
6047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci"""""""""""""
6057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6067db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThese can be used as types in annotations and do not support ``[]``.
6077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Any
6097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Special type indicating an unconstrained type.
6117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * Every type is compatible with :data:`Any`.
6137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * :data:`Any` is compatible with every type.
6147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.11
6167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :data:`Any` can now be used as a base class. This can be useful for
6177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      avoiding type checker errors with classes that can duck type anywhere or
6187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      are highly dynamic.
6197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: AnyStr
6217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``AnyStr`` is a :ref:`constrained type variable <typing-constrained-typevar>` defined as
6237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``AnyStr = TypeVar('AnyStr', str, bytes)``.
6247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   It is meant to be used for functions that may accept any kind of string
6267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   without allowing different kinds of strings to mix. For example::
6277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def concat(a: AnyStr, b: AnyStr) -> AnyStr:
6297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return a + b
6307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      concat(u"foo", u"bar")  # Ok, output has type 'unicode'
6327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      concat(b"foo", b"bar")  # Ok, output has type 'bytes'
6337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      concat(u"foo", b"bar")  # Error, cannot mix unicode and bytes
6347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: LiteralString
6367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Special type that includes only literal strings. A string
6387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   literal is compatible with ``LiteralString``, as is another
6397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``LiteralString``, but an object typed as just ``str`` is not.
6407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A string created by composing ``LiteralString``-typed objects
6417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   is also acceptable as a ``LiteralString``.
6427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Example::
6447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def run_query(sql: LiteralString) -> ...
6467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
6477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def caller(arbitrary_string: str, literal_string: LiteralString) -> None:
6497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          run_query("SELECT * FROM students")  # ok
6507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          run_query(literal_string)  # ok
6517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          run_query("SELECT * FROM " + literal_string)  # ok
6527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          run_query(arbitrary_string)  # type checker error
6537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          run_query(  # type checker error
6547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              f"SELECT * FROM students WHERE name = {arbitrary_string}"
6557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          )
6567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This is useful for sensitive APIs where arbitrary user-generated
6587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   strings could generate problems. For example, the two cases above
6597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   that generate type checker errors could be vulnerable to an SQL
6607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   injection attack.
6617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :pep:`675` for more details.
6637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.11
6657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Never
6677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The `bottom type <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottom_type>`_,
6697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   a type that has no members.
6707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This can be used to define a function that should never be
6727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   called, or a function that never returns::
6737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      from typing import Never
6757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def never_call_me(arg: Never) -> None:
6777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          pass
6787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def int_or_str(arg: int | str) -> None:
6807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          never_call_me(arg)  # type checker error
6817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          match arg:
6827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              case int():
6837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci                  print("It's an int")
6847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              case str():
6857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci                  print("It's a str")
6867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              case _:
6877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci                  never_call_me(arg)  # ok, arg is of type Never
6887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.11
6907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      On older Python versions, :data:`NoReturn` may be used to express the
6927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      same concept. ``Never`` was added to make the intended meaning more explicit.
6937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: NoReturn
6957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Special type indicating that a function never returns.
6977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For example::
6987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
6997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      from typing import NoReturn
7007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def stop() -> NoReturn:
7027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          raise RuntimeError('no way')
7037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``NoReturn`` can also be used as a
7057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   `bottom type <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottom_type>`_, a type that
7067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   has no values. Starting in Python 3.11, the :data:`Never` type should
7077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   be used for this concept instead. Type checkers should treat the two
7087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   equivalently.
7097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.4
7117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.6.2
7127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Self
7147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Special type to represent the current enclosed class.
7167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For example::
7177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      from typing import Self
7197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Foo:
7217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def return_self(self) -> Self:
7227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              ...
7237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              return self
7247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This annotation is semantically equivalent to the following,
7277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   albeit in a more succinct fashion::
7287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      from typing import TypeVar
7307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Self = TypeVar("Self", bound="Foo")
7327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Foo:
7347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def return_self(self: Self) -> Self:
7357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              ...
7367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              return self
7377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   In general if something currently follows the pattern of::
7397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Foo:
7417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def return_self(self) -> "Foo":
7427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              ...
7437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              return self
7447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   You should use :data:`Self` as calls to ``SubclassOfFoo.return_self`` would have
7467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Foo`` as the return type and not ``SubclassOfFoo``.
7477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Other common use cases include:
7497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   - :class:`classmethod`\s that are used as alternative constructors and return instances
7517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     of the ``cls`` parameter.
7527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   - Annotating an :meth:`~object.__enter__` method which returns self.
7537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :pep:`673` for more details.
7557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.11
7577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: TypeAlias
7597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Special annotation for explicitly declaring a :ref:`type alias <type-aliases>`.
7617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For example::
7627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    from typing import TypeAlias
7647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    Factors: TypeAlias = list[int]
7667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :pep:`613` for more details about explicit type aliases.
7687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.10
7707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7717db96d56Sopenharmony_ciSpecial forms
7727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci"""""""""""""
7737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7747db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThese can be used as types in annotations using ``[]``, each having a unique syntax.
7757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Tuple
7777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Tuple type; ``Tuple[X, Y]`` is the type of a tuple of two items
7797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   with the first item of type X and the second of type Y. The type of
7807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   the empty tuple can be written as ``Tuple[()]``.
7817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Example: ``Tuple[T1, T2]`` is a tuple of two elements corresponding
7837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   to type variables T1 and T2.  ``Tuple[int, float, str]`` is a tuple
7847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   of an int, a float and a string.
7857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   To specify a variable-length tuple of homogeneous type,
7877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   use literal ellipsis, e.g. ``Tuple[int, ...]``. A plain :data:`Tuple`
7887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   is equivalent to ``Tuple[Any, ...]``, and in turn to :class:`tuple`.
7897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
7917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`builtins.tuple <tuple>` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
7927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
7937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Union
7957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Union type; ``Union[X, Y]`` is equivalent to ``X | Y`` and means either X or Y.
7977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
7987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   To define a union, use e.g. ``Union[int, str]`` or the shorthand ``int | str``. Using that shorthand is recommended. Details:
7997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * The arguments must be types and there must be at least one.
8017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * Unions of unions are flattened, e.g.::
8037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       Union[Union[int, str], float] == Union[int, str, float]
8057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * Unions of a single argument vanish, e.g.::
8077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       Union[int] == int  # The constructor actually returns int
8097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * Redundant arguments are skipped, e.g.::
8117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       Union[int, str, int] == Union[int, str] == int | str
8137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * When comparing unions, the argument order is ignored, e.g.::
8157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       Union[int, str] == Union[str, int]
8177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * You cannot subclass or instantiate a ``Union``.
8197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * You cannot write ``Union[X][Y]``.
8217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.7
8237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Don't remove explicit subclasses from unions at runtime.
8247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.10
8267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Unions can now be written as ``X | Y``. See
8277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :ref:`union type expressions<types-union>`.
8287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Optional
8307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Optional type.
8327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Optional[X]`` is equivalent to ``X | None`` (or ``Union[X, None]``).
8347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Note that this is not the same concept as an optional argument,
8367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   which is one that has a default.  An optional argument with a
8377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   default does not require the ``Optional`` qualifier on its type
8387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   annotation just because it is optional. For example::
8397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def foo(arg: int = 0) -> None:
8417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
8427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   On the other hand, if an explicit value of ``None`` is allowed, the
8447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   use of ``Optional`` is appropriate, whether the argument is optional
8457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   or not. For example::
8467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def foo(arg: Optional[int] = None) -> None:
8487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
8497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.10
8517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Optional can now be written as ``X | None``. See
8527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :ref:`union type expressions<types-union>`.
8537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Callable
8557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Callable type; ``Callable[[int], str]`` is a function of (int) -> str.
8577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The subscription syntax must always be used with exactly two
8597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   values: the argument list and the return type.  The argument list
8607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   must be a list of types or an ellipsis; the return type must be
8617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   a single type.
8627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   There is no syntax to indicate optional or keyword arguments;
8647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   such function types are rarely used as callback types.
8657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Callable[..., ReturnType]`` (literal ellipsis) can be used to
8667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   type hint a callable taking any number of arguments and returning
8677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``ReturnType``.  A plain :data:`Callable` is equivalent to
8687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Callable[..., Any]``, and in turn to
8697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :class:`collections.abc.Callable`.
8707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Callables which take other callables as arguments may indicate that their
8727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   parameter types are dependent on each other using :class:`ParamSpec`.
8737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Additionally, if that callable adds or removes arguments from other
8747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   callables, the :data:`Concatenate` operator may be used.  They
8757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   take the form ``Callable[ParamSpecVariable, ReturnType]`` and
8767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Callable[Concatenate[Arg1Type, Arg2Type, ..., ParamSpecVariable], ReturnType]``
8777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   respectively.
8787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
8807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.Callable` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
8817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
8827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.10
8847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``Callable`` now supports :class:`ParamSpec` and :data:`Concatenate`.
8857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`612` for more details.
8867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. seealso::
8887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The documentation for :class:`ParamSpec` and :class:`Concatenate` provide
8897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      examples of usage with ``Callable``.
8907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Concatenate
8927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
8937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Used with :data:`Callable` and :class:`ParamSpec` to type annotate a higher
8947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   order callable which adds, removes, or transforms parameters of another
8957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   callable.  Usage is in the form
8967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Concatenate[Arg1Type, Arg2Type, ..., ParamSpecVariable]``. ``Concatenate``
8977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   is currently only valid when used as the first argument to a :data:`Callable`.
8987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The last parameter to ``Concatenate`` must be a :class:`ParamSpec` or
8997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ellipsis (``...``).
9007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For example, to annotate a decorator ``with_lock`` which provides a
9027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :class:`threading.Lock` to the decorated function,  ``Concatenate`` can be
9037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   used to indicate that ``with_lock`` expects a callable which takes in a
9047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Lock`` as the first argument, and returns a callable with a different type
9057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   signature.  In this case, the :class:`ParamSpec` indicates that the returned
9067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   callable's parameter types are dependent on the parameter types of the
9077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   callable being passed in::
9087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      from collections.abc import Callable
9107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      from threading import Lock
9117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      from typing import Concatenate, ParamSpec, TypeVar
9127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      P = ParamSpec('P')
9147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      R = TypeVar('R')
9157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # Use this lock to ensure that only one thread is executing a function
9177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # at any time.
9187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      my_lock = Lock()
9197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def with_lock(f: Callable[Concatenate[Lock, P], R]) -> Callable[P, R]:
9217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          '''A type-safe decorator which provides a lock.'''
9227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def inner(*args: P.args, **kwargs: P.kwargs) -> R:
9237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              # Provide the lock as the first argument.
9247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              return f(my_lock, *args, **kwargs)
9257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return inner
9267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @with_lock
9287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def sum_threadsafe(lock: Lock, numbers: list[float]) -> float:
9297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          '''Add a list of numbers together in a thread-safe manner.'''
9307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          with lock:
9317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              return sum(numbers)
9327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # We don't need to pass in the lock ourselves thanks to the decorator.
9347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      sum_threadsafe([1.1, 2.2, 3.3])
9357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.10
9377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. seealso::
9397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      * :pep:`612` -- Parameter Specification Variables (the PEP which introduced
9417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        ``ParamSpec`` and ``Concatenate``).
9427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      * :class:`ParamSpec` and :class:`Callable`.
9437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Type(Generic[CT_co])
9467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A variable annotated with ``C`` may accept a value of type ``C``. In
9487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   contrast, a variable annotated with ``Type[C]`` may accept values that are
9497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   classes themselves -- specifically, it will accept the *class object* of
9507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``C``. For example::
9517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      a = 3         # Has type 'int'
9537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      b = int       # Has type 'Type[int]'
9547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      c = type(a)   # Also has type 'Type[int]'
9557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Note that ``Type[C]`` is covariant::
9577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class User: ...
9597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class BasicUser(User): ...
9607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class ProUser(User): ...
9617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class TeamUser(User): ...
9627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # Accepts User, BasicUser, ProUser, TeamUser, ...
9647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def make_new_user(user_class: Type[User]) -> User:
9657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          # ...
9667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return user_class()
9677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The fact that ``Type[C]`` is covariant implies that all subclasses of
9697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``C`` should implement the same constructor signature and class method
9707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   signatures as ``C``. The type checker should flag violations of this,
9717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   but should also allow constructor calls in subclasses that match the
9727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   constructor calls in the indicated base class. How the type checker is
9737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   required to handle this particular case may change in future revisions of
9747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :pep:`484`.
9757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The only legal parameters for :class:`Type` are classes, :data:`Any`,
9777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :ref:`type variables <generics>`, and unions of any of these types.
9787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For example::
9797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def new_non_team_user(user_class: Type[BasicUser | ProUser]): ...
9817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Type[Any]`` is equivalent to ``Type`` which in turn is equivalent
9837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   to ``type``, which is the root of Python's metaclass hierarchy.
9847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.2
9867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
9887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`builtins.type <type>` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
9897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
9907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Literal
9927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A type that can be used to indicate to type checkers that the
9947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   corresponding variable or function parameter has a value equivalent to
9957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   the provided literal (or one of several literals). For example::
9967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
9977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def validate_simple(data: Any) -> Literal[True]:  # always returns True
9987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
9997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      MODE = Literal['r', 'rb', 'w', 'wb']
10017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def open_helper(file: str, mode: MODE) -> str:
10027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
10037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      open_helper('/some/path', 'r')  # Passes type check
10057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      open_helper('/other/path', 'typo')  # Error in type checker
10067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Literal[...]`` cannot be subclassed. At runtime, an arbitrary value
10087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   is allowed as type argument to ``Literal[...]``, but type checkers may
10097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   impose restrictions. See :pep:`586` for more details about literal types.
10107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.8
10127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.9.1
10147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``Literal`` now de-duplicates parameters.  Equality comparisons of
10157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``Literal`` objects are no longer order dependent. ``Literal`` objects
10167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      will now raise a :exc:`TypeError` exception during equality comparisons
10177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      if one of their parameters are not :term:`hashable`.
10187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: ClassVar
10207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Special type construct to mark class variables.
10227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   As introduced in :pep:`526`, a variable annotation wrapped in ClassVar
10247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   indicates that a given attribute is intended to be used as a class variable
10257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   and should not be set on instances of that class. Usage::
10267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Starship:
10287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          stats: ClassVar[dict[str, int]] = {} # class variable
10297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          damage: int = 10                     # instance variable
10307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :data:`ClassVar` accepts only types and cannot be further subscribed.
10327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :data:`ClassVar` is not a class itself, and should not
10347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   be used with :func:`isinstance` or :func:`issubclass`.
10357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :data:`ClassVar` does not change Python runtime behavior, but
10367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   it can be used by third-party type checkers. For example, a type checker
10377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   might flag the following code as an error::
10387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      enterprise_d = Starship(3000)
10407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      enterprise_d.stats = {} # Error, setting class variable on instance
10417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Starship.stats = {}     # This is OK
10427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.3
10447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Final
10467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A special typing construct to indicate to type checkers that a name
10487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   cannot be re-assigned or overridden in a subclass. For example::
10497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      MAX_SIZE: Final = 9000
10517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      MAX_SIZE += 1  # Error reported by type checker
10527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Connection:
10547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          TIMEOUT: Final[int] = 10
10557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class FastConnector(Connection):
10577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          TIMEOUT = 1  # Error reported by type checker
10587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   There is no runtime checking of these properties. See :pep:`591` for
10607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   more details.
10617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.8
10637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Required
10657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: NotRequired
10677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Special typing constructs that mark individual keys of a :class:`TypedDict`
10697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   as either required or non-required respectively.
10707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :class:`TypedDict` and :pep:`655` for more details.
10727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.11
10747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Annotated
10767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A type, introduced in :pep:`593` (``Flexible function and variable
10787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   annotations``), to decorate existing types with context-specific metadata
10797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   (possibly multiple pieces of it, as ``Annotated`` is variadic).
10807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Specifically, a type ``T`` can be annotated with metadata ``x`` via the
10817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   typehint ``Annotated[T, x]``. This metadata can be used for either static
10827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   analysis or at runtime. If a library (or tool) encounters a typehint
10837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Annotated[T, x]`` and has no special logic for metadata ``x``, it
10847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   should ignore it and simply treat the type as ``T``. Unlike the
10857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``no_type_check`` functionality that currently exists in the ``typing``
10867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   module which completely disables typechecking annotations on a function
10877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   or a class, the ``Annotated`` type allows for both static typechecking
10887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   of ``T`` (which can safely ignore ``x``)
10897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   together with runtime access to ``x`` within a specific application.
10907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Ultimately, the responsibility of how to interpret the annotations (if
10927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   at all) is the responsibility of the tool or library encountering the
10937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Annotated`` type. A tool or library encountering an ``Annotated`` type
10947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   can scan through the annotations to determine if they are of interest
10957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   (e.g., using ``isinstance()``).
10967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
10977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   When a tool or a library does not support annotations or encounters an
10987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   unknown annotation it should just ignore it and treat annotated type as
10997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   the underlying type.
11007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   It's up to the tool consuming the annotations to decide whether the
11027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   client is allowed to have several annotations on one type and how to
11037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   merge those annotations.
11047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Since the ``Annotated`` type allows you to put several annotations of
11067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   the same (or different) type(s) on any node, the tools or libraries
11077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   consuming those annotations are in charge of dealing with potential
11087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   duplicates. For example, if you are doing value range analysis you might
11097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   allow this::
11107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       T1 = Annotated[int, ValueRange(-10, 5)]
11127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       T2 = Annotated[T1, ValueRange(-20, 3)]
11137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Passing ``include_extras=True`` to :func:`get_type_hints` lets one
11157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   access the extra annotations at runtime.
11167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The details of the syntax:
11187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * The first argument to ``Annotated`` must be a valid type
11207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * Multiple type annotations are supported (``Annotated`` supports variadic
11227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     arguments)::
11237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       Annotated[int, ValueRange(3, 10), ctype("char")]
11257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * ``Annotated`` must be called with at least two arguments (
11277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     ``Annotated[int]`` is not valid)
11287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * The order of the annotations is preserved and matters for equality
11307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     checks::
11317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       Annotated[int, ValueRange(3, 10), ctype("char")] != Annotated[
11337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           int, ctype("char"), ValueRange(3, 10)
11347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ]
11357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * Nested ``Annotated`` types are flattened, with metadata ordered
11377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     starting with the innermost annotation::
11387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       Annotated[Annotated[int, ValueRange(3, 10)], ctype("char")] == Annotated[
11407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           int, ValueRange(3, 10), ctype("char")
11417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ]
11427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * Duplicated annotations are not removed::
11447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       Annotated[int, ValueRange(3, 10)] != Annotated[
11467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           int, ValueRange(3, 10), ValueRange(3, 10)
11477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       ]
11487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * ``Annotated`` can be used with nested and generic aliases::
11507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       T = TypeVar('T')
11527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       Vec = Annotated[list[tuple[T, T]], MaxLen(10)]
11537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       V = Vec[int]
11547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       V == Annotated[list[tuple[int, int]], MaxLen(10)]
11567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.9
11587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: TypeGuard
11617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Special typing form used to annotate the return type of a user-defined
11637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   type guard function.  ``TypeGuard`` only accepts a single type argument.
11647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   At runtime, functions marked this way should return a boolean.
11657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``TypeGuard`` aims to benefit *type narrowing* -- a technique used by static
11677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   type checkers to determine a more precise type of an expression within a
11687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   program's code flow.  Usually type narrowing is done by analyzing
11697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   conditional code flow and applying the narrowing to a block of code.  The
11707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   conditional expression here is sometimes referred to as a "type guard"::
11717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def is_str(val: str | float):
11737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          # "isinstance" type guard
11747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          if isinstance(val, str):
11757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              # Type of ``val`` is narrowed to ``str``
11767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              ...
11777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          else:
11787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              # Else, type of ``val`` is narrowed to ``float``.
11797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              ...
11807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Sometimes it would be convenient to use a user-defined boolean function
11827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   as a type guard.  Such a function should use ``TypeGuard[...]`` as its
11837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   return type to alert static type checkers to this intention.
11847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Using  ``-> TypeGuard`` tells the static type checker that for a given
11867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   function:
11877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   1. The return value is a boolean.
11897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   2. If the return value is ``True``, the type of its argument
11907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      is the type inside ``TypeGuard``.
11917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For example::
11937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         def is_str_list(val: list[object]) -> TypeGuard[list[str]]:
11957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci             '''Determines whether all objects in the list are strings'''
11967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci             return all(isinstance(x, str) for x in val)
11977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
11987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         def func1(val: list[object]):
11997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci             if is_str_list(val):
12007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci                 # Type of ``val`` is narrowed to ``list[str]``.
12017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci                 print(" ".join(val))
12027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci             else:
12037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci                 # Type of ``val`` remains as ``list[object]``.
12047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci                 print("Not a list of strings!")
12057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   If ``is_str_list`` is a class or instance method, then the type in
12077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``TypeGuard`` maps to the type of the second parameter after ``cls`` or
12087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``self``.
12097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   In short, the form ``def foo(arg: TypeA) -> TypeGuard[TypeB]: ...``,
12117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   means that if ``foo(arg)`` returns ``True``, then ``arg`` narrows from
12127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``TypeA`` to ``TypeB``.
12137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. note::
12157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``TypeB`` need not be a narrower form of ``TypeA`` -- it can even be a
12177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      wider form. The main reason is to allow for things like
12187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      narrowing ``list[object]`` to ``list[str]`` even though the latter
12197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      is not a subtype of the former, since ``list`` is invariant.
12207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The responsibility of writing type-safe type guards is left to the user.
12217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``TypeGuard`` also works with type variables.  See :pep:`647` for more details.
12237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.10
12257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: Unpack
12287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A typing operator that conceptually marks an object as having been
12307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   unpacked. For example, using the unpack operator ``*`` on a
12317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :class:`type variable tuple <TypeVarTuple>` is equivalent to using ``Unpack``
12327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   to mark the type variable tuple as having been unpacked::
12337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Ts = TypeVarTuple('Ts')
12357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      tup: tuple[*Ts]
12367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # Effectively does:
12377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      tup: tuple[Unpack[Ts]]
12387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   In fact, ``Unpack`` can be used interchangeably with ``*`` in the context
12407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   of :class:`typing.TypeVarTuple <TypeVarTuple>` and
12417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :class:`builtins.tuple <tuple>` types. You might see ``Unpack`` being used
12427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   explicitly in older versions of Python, where ``*`` couldn't be used in
12437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   certain places::
12447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # In older versions of Python, TypeVarTuple and Unpack
12467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # are located in the `typing_extensions` backports package.
12477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      from typing_extensions import TypeVarTuple, Unpack
12487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Ts = TypeVarTuple('Ts')
12507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      tup: tuple[*Ts]         # Syntax error on Python <= 3.10!
12517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      tup: tuple[Unpack[Ts]]  # Semantically equivalent, and backwards-compatible
12527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.11
12547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12557db96d56Sopenharmony_ciBuilding generic types
12567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci""""""""""""""""""""""
12577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12587db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe following objects are not used directly in annotations. Instead, they are building blocks
12597db96d56Sopenharmony_cifor creating generic types.
12607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Generic
12627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Abstract base class for generic types.
12647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic type is typically declared by inheriting from an
12667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   instantiation of this class with one or more type variables.
12677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For example, a generic mapping type might be defined as::
12687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Mapping(Generic[KT, VT]):
12707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def __getitem__(self, key: KT) -> VT:
12717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              ...
12727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              # Etc.
12737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This class can then be used as follows::
12757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      X = TypeVar('X')
12777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Y = TypeVar('Y')
12787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def lookup_name(mapping: Mapping[X, Y], key: X, default: Y) -> Y:
12807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          try:
12817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              return mapping[key]
12827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          except KeyError:
12837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              return default
12847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: TypeVar(name, *constraints, bound=None, covariant=False, contravariant=False)
12867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Type variable.
12887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Usage::
12907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      T = TypeVar('T')  # Can be anything
12927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      S = TypeVar('S', bound=str)  # Can be any subtype of str
12937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      A = TypeVar('A', str, bytes)  # Must be exactly str or bytes
12947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
12957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Type variables exist primarily for the benefit of static type
12967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   checkers.  They serve as the parameters for generic types as well
12977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   as for generic function and type alias definitions.
12987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :class:`Generic` for more
12997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   information on generic types.  Generic functions work as follows::
13007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def repeat(x: T, n: int) -> Sequence[T]:
13027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          """Return a list containing n references to x."""
13037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return [x]*n
13047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def print_capitalized(x: S) -> S:
13077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          """Print x capitalized, and return x."""
13087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          print(x.capitalize())
13097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return x
13107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def concatenate(x: A, y: A) -> A:
13137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          """Add two strings or bytes objects together."""
13147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return x + y
13157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Note that type variables can be *bound*, *constrained*, or neither, but
13177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   cannot be both bound *and* constrained.
13187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Created type variables may be explicitly marked covariant or contravariant by passing
13207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``covariant=True`` or ``contravariant=True``.
13217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   By default, type variables are invariant.
13227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :pep:`484` and :pep:`695` for more details.
13237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Bound type variables and constrained type variables have different
13257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   semantics in several important ways. Using a *bound* type variable means
13267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   that the ``TypeVar`` will be solved using the most specific type possible::
13277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      x = print_capitalized('a string')
13297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      reveal_type(x)  # revealed type is str
13307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class StringSubclass(str):
13327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          pass
13337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      y = print_capitalized(StringSubclass('another string'))
13357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      reveal_type(y)  # revealed type is StringSubclass
13367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      z = print_capitalized(45)  # error: int is not a subtype of str
13387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Type variables can be bound to concrete types, abstract types (ABCs or
13407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   protocols), and even unions of types::
13417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      U = TypeVar('U', bound=str|bytes)  # Can be any subtype of the union str|bytes
13437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      V = TypeVar('V', bound=SupportsAbs)  # Can be anything with an __abs__ method
13447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. _typing-constrained-typevar:
13467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Using a *constrained* type variable, however, means that the ``TypeVar``
13487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   can only ever be solved as being exactly one of the constraints given::
13497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      a = concatenate('one', 'two')
13517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      reveal_type(a)  # revealed type is str
13527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      b = concatenate(StringSubclass('one'), StringSubclass('two'))
13547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      reveal_type(b)  # revealed type is str, despite StringSubclass being passed in
13557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      c = concatenate('one', b'two')  # error: type variable 'A' can be either str or bytes in a function call, but not both
13577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   At runtime, ``isinstance(x, T)`` will raise :exc:`TypeError`.
13597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __name__
13617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The name of the type variable.
13637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __covariant__
13657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Whether the type var has been marked as covariant.
13677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __contravariant__
13697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Whether the type var has been marked as contravariant.
13717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __bound__
13737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The bound of the type variable, if any.
13757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __constraints__
13777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      A tuple containing the constraints of the type variable, if any.
13797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: TypeVarTuple(name)
13817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Type variable tuple. A specialized form of :class:`type variable <TypeVar>`
13837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   that enables *variadic* generics.
13847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Usage::
13867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      T = TypeVar("T")
13887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Ts = TypeVarTuple("Ts")
13897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def move_first_element_to_last(tup: tuple[T, *Ts]) -> tuple[*Ts, T]:
13917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return (*tup[1:], tup[0])
13927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A normal type variable enables parameterization with a single type. A type
13947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   variable tuple, in contrast, allows parameterization with an
13957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   *arbitrary* number of types by acting like an *arbitrary* number of type
13967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   variables wrapped in a tuple. For example::
13977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
13987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # T is bound to int, Ts is bound to ()
13997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # Return value is (1,), which has type tuple[int]
14007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      move_first_element_to_last(tup=(1,))
14017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # T is bound to int, Ts is bound to (str,)
14037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # Return value is ('spam', 1), which has type tuple[str, int]
14047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      move_first_element_to_last(tup=(1, 'spam'))
14057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # T is bound to int, Ts is bound to (str, float)
14077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # Return value is ('spam', 3.0, 1), which has type tuple[str, float, int]
14087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      move_first_element_to_last(tup=(1, 'spam', 3.0))
14097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # This fails to type check (and fails at runtime)
14117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # because tuple[()] is not compatible with tuple[T, *Ts]
14127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # (at least one element is required)
14137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      move_first_element_to_last(tup=())
14147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Note the use of the unpacking operator ``*`` in ``tuple[T, *Ts]``.
14167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Conceptually, you can think of ``Ts`` as a tuple of type variables
14177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``(T1, T2, ...)``. ``tuple[T, *Ts]`` would then become
14187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``tuple[T, *(T1, T2, ...)]``, which is equivalent to
14197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``tuple[T, T1, T2, ...]``. (Note that in older versions of Python, you might
14207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   see this written using :data:`Unpack <Unpack>` instead, as
14217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Unpack[Ts]``.)
14227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Type variable tuples must *always* be unpacked. This helps distinguish type
14247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   variable tuples from normal type variables::
14257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      x: Ts          # Not valid
14277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      x: tuple[Ts]   # Not valid
14287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      x: tuple[*Ts]  # The correct way to do it
14297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Type variable tuples can be used in the same contexts as normal type
14317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   variables. For example, in class definitions, arguments, and return types::
14327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Shape = TypeVarTuple("Shape")
14347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Array(Generic[*Shape]):
14357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def __getitem__(self, key: tuple[*Shape]) -> float: ...
14367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def __abs__(self) -> "Array[*Shape]": ...
14377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def get_shape(self) -> tuple[*Shape]: ...
14387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Type variable tuples can be happily combined with normal type variables::
14407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      DType = TypeVar('DType')
14427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Array(Generic[DType, *Shape]):  # This is fine
14447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          pass
14457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Array2(Generic[*Shape, DType]):  # This would also be fine
14477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          pass
14487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      float_array_1d: Array[float, Height] = Array()     # Totally fine
14507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      int_array_2d: Array[int, Height, Width] = Array()  # Yup, fine too
14517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   However, note that at most one type variable tuple may appear in a single
14537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   list of type arguments or type parameters::
14547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      x: tuple[*Ts, *Ts]                     # Not valid
14567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Array(Generic[*Shape, *Shape]):  # Not valid
14577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          pass
14587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Finally, an unpacked type variable tuple can be used as the type annotation
14607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   of ``*args``::
14617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def call_soon(
14637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci               callback: Callable[[*Ts], None],
14647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci               *args: *Ts
14657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ) -> None:
14667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
14677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          callback(*args)
14687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   In contrast to non-unpacked annotations of ``*args`` - e.g. ``*args: int``,
14707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   which would specify that *all* arguments are ``int`` - ``*args: *Ts``
14717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   enables reference to the types of the *individual* arguments in ``*args``.
14727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Here, this allows us to ensure the types of the ``*args`` passed
14737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   to ``call_soon`` match the types of the (positional) arguments of
14747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``callback``.
14757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :pep:`646` for more details on type variable tuples.
14777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __name__
14797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The name of the type variable tuple.
14817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.11
14837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: ParamSpec(name, *, bound=None, covariant=False, contravariant=False)
14857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Parameter specification variable.  A specialized version of
14877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :class:`type variables <TypeVar>`.
14887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Usage::
14907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      P = ParamSpec('P')
14927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
14937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Parameter specification variables exist primarily for the benefit of static
14947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   type checkers.  They are used to forward the parameter types of one
14957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   callable to another callable -- a pattern commonly found in higher order
14967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   functions and decorators.  They are only valid when used in ``Concatenate``,
14977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   or as the first argument to ``Callable``, or as parameters for user-defined
14987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Generics.  See :class:`Generic` for more information on generic types.
14997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For example, to add basic logging to a function, one can create a decorator
15017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``add_logging`` to log function calls.  The parameter specification variable
15027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   tells the type checker that the callable passed into the decorator and the
15037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   new callable returned by it have inter-dependent type parameters::
15047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      from collections.abc import Callable
15067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      from typing import TypeVar, ParamSpec
15077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      import logging
15087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      T = TypeVar('T')
15107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      P = ParamSpec('P')
15117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def add_logging(f: Callable[P, T]) -> Callable[P, T]:
15137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          '''A type-safe decorator to add logging to a function.'''
15147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def inner(*args: P.args, **kwargs: P.kwargs) -> T:
15157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              logging.info(f'{f.__name__} was called')
15167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              return f(*args, **kwargs)
15177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return inner
15187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @add_logging
15207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def add_two(x: float, y: float) -> float:
15217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          '''Add two numbers together.'''
15227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return x + y
15237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Without ``ParamSpec``, the simplest way to annotate this previously was to
15257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   use a :class:`TypeVar` with bound ``Callable[..., Any]``.  However this
15267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   causes two problems:
15277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   1. The type checker can't type check the ``inner`` function because
15297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``*args`` and ``**kwargs`` have to be typed :data:`Any`.
15307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   2. :func:`~cast` may be required in the body of the ``add_logging``
15317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      decorator when returning the ``inner`` function, or the static type
15327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      checker must be told to ignore the ``return inner``.
15337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: args
15357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: kwargs
15367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Since ``ParamSpec`` captures both positional and keyword parameters,
15387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``P.args`` and ``P.kwargs`` can be used to split a ``ParamSpec`` into its
15397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      components.  ``P.args`` represents the tuple of positional parameters in a
15407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      given call and should only be used to annotate ``*args``.  ``P.kwargs``
15417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      represents the mapping of keyword parameters to their values in a given call,
15427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      and should be only be used to annotate ``**kwargs``.  Both
15437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      attributes require the annotated parameter to be in scope. At runtime,
15447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``P.args`` and ``P.kwargs`` are instances respectively of
15457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`ParamSpecArgs` and :class:`ParamSpecKwargs`.
15467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __name__
15487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The name of the parameter specification.
15507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Parameter specification variables created with ``covariant=True`` or
15527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``contravariant=True`` can be used to declare covariant or contravariant
15537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   generic types.  The ``bound`` argument is also accepted, similar to
15547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :class:`TypeVar`.  However the actual semantics of these keywords are yet to
15557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   be decided.
15567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.10
15587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. note::
15607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Only parameter specification variables defined in global scope can
15617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      be pickled.
15627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. seealso::
15647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      * :pep:`612` -- Parameter Specification Variables (the PEP which introduced
15657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        ``ParamSpec`` and ``Concatenate``).
15667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      * :class:`Callable` and :class:`Concatenate`.
15677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: ParamSpecArgs
15697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: ParamSpecKwargs
15707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Arguments and keyword arguments attributes of a :class:`ParamSpec`. The
15727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``P.args`` attribute of a ``ParamSpec`` is an instance of ``ParamSpecArgs``,
15737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   and ``P.kwargs`` is an instance of ``ParamSpecKwargs``. They are intended
15747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   for runtime introspection and have no special meaning to static type checkers.
15757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Calling :func:`get_origin` on either of these objects will return the
15777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   original ``ParamSpec``::
15787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      P = ParamSpec("P")
15807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      get_origin(P.args)  # returns P
15817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      get_origin(P.kwargs)  # returns P
15827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.10
15847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15867db96d56Sopenharmony_ciOther special directives
15877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci""""""""""""""""""""""""
15887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15897db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThese are not used in annotations. They are building blocks for declaring types.
15907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: NamedTuple
15927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Typed version of :func:`collections.namedtuple`.
15947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Usage::
15967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
15977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       class Employee(NamedTuple):
15987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           name: str
15997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           id: int
16007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This is equivalent to::
16027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       Employee = collections.namedtuple('Employee', ['name', 'id'])
16047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   To give a field a default value, you can assign to it in the class body::
16067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Employee(NamedTuple):
16087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          name: str
16097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          id: int = 3
16107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      employee = Employee('Guido')
16127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      assert employee.id == 3
16137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Fields with a default value must come after any fields without a default.
16157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The resulting class has an extra attribute ``__annotations__`` giving a
16177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   dict that maps the field names to the field types.  (The field names are in
16187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   the ``_fields`` attribute and the default values are in the
16197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``_field_defaults`` attribute, both of which are part of the :func:`~collections.namedtuple`
16207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   API.)
16217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``NamedTuple`` subclasses can also have docstrings and methods::
16237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Employee(NamedTuple):
16257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          """Represents an employee."""
16267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          name: str
16277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          id: int = 3
16287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def __repr__(self) -> str:
16307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              return f'<Employee {self.name}, id={self.id}>'
16317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``NamedTuple`` subclasses can be generic::
16337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Group(NamedTuple, Generic[T]):
16357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          key: T
16367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          group: list[T]
16377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Backward-compatible usage::
16397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       Employee = NamedTuple('Employee', [('name', str), ('id', int)])
16417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.6
16437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Added support for :pep:`526` variable annotation syntax.
16447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.6.1
16467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Added support for default values, methods, and docstrings.
16477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.8
16497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The ``_field_types`` and ``__annotations__`` attributes are
16507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      now regular dictionaries instead of instances of ``OrderedDict``.
16517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.9
16537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Removed the ``_field_types`` attribute in favor of the more
16547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      standard ``__annotations__`` attribute which has the same information.
16557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.11
16577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Added support for generic namedtuples.
16587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: NewType(name, tp)
16607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A helper class to indicate a distinct type to a typechecker,
16627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   see :ref:`distinct`. At runtime it returns an object that returns
16637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   its argument when called.
16647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Usage::
16657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      UserId = NewType('UserId', int)
16677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      first_user = UserId(1)
16687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __module__
16707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The module in which the new type is defined.
16727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __name__
16747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The name of the new type.
16767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __supertype__
16787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The type that the new type is based on.
16807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.2
16827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.10
16847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``NewType`` is now a class rather than a function.
16857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Protocol(Generic)
16877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Base class for protocol classes. Protocol classes are defined like this::
16897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Proto(Protocol):
16917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def meth(self) -> int:
16927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              ...
16937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Such classes are primarily used with static type checkers that recognize
16957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   structural subtyping (static duck-typing), for example::
16967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
16977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class C:
16987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def meth(self) -> int:
16997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              return 0
17007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def func(x: Proto) -> int:
17027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return x.meth()
17037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      func(C())  # Passes static type check
17057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :pep:`544` for more details. Protocol classes decorated with
17077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :func:`runtime_checkable` (described later) act as simple-minded runtime
17087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   protocols that check only the presence of given attributes, ignoring their
17097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   type signatures.
17107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Protocol classes can be generic, for example::
17127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      T = TypeVar("T")
17147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class GenProto(Protocol[T]):
17167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def meth(self) -> T:
17177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              ...
17187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.8
17207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. decorator:: runtime_checkable
17227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Mark a protocol class as a runtime protocol.
17247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Such a protocol can be used with :func:`isinstance` and :func:`issubclass`.
17267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This raises :exc:`TypeError` when applied to a non-protocol class.  This
17277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   allows a simple-minded structural check, very similar to "one trick ponies"
17287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   in :mod:`collections.abc` such as :class:`~collections.abc.Iterable`.  For example::
17297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @runtime_checkable
17317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Closable(Protocol):
17327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def close(self): ...
17337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      assert isinstance(open('/some/file'), Closable)
17357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @runtime_checkable
17377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Named(Protocol):
17387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          name: str
17397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      import threading
17417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      assert isinstance(threading.Thread(name='Bob'), Named)
17427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. note::
17447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        :func:`!runtime_checkable` will check only the presence of the required
17467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        methods or attributes, not their type signatures or types.
17477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        For example, :class:`ssl.SSLObject`
17487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        is a class, therefore it passes an :func:`issubclass`
17497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        check against :data:`Callable`.  However, the
17507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        ``ssl.SSLObject.__init__`` method exists only to raise a
17517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        :exc:`TypeError` with a more informative message, therefore making
17527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        it impossible to call (instantiate) :class:`ssl.SSLObject`.
17537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. note::
17557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        An :func:`isinstance` check against a runtime-checkable protocol can be
17577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        surprisingly slow compared to an ``isinstance()`` check against
17587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        a non-protocol class. Consider using alternative idioms such as
17597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        :func:`hasattr` calls for structural checks in performance-sensitive
17607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci        code.
17617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.8
17637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: TypedDict(dict)
17667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Special construct to add type hints to a dictionary.
17687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   At runtime it is a plain :class:`dict`.
17697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``TypedDict`` declares a dictionary type that expects all of its
17717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   instances to have a certain set of keys, where each key is
17727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   associated with a value of a consistent type. This expectation
17737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   is not checked at runtime but is only enforced by type checkers.
17747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Usage::
17757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Point2D(TypedDict):
17777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          x: int
17787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          y: int
17797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          label: str
17807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      a: Point2D = {'x': 1, 'y': 2, 'label': 'good'}  # OK
17827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      b: Point2D = {'z': 3, 'label': 'bad'}           # Fails type check
17837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      assert Point2D(x=1, y=2, label='first') == dict(x=1, y=2, label='first')
17857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   To allow using this feature with older versions of Python that do not
17877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   support :pep:`526`, ``TypedDict`` supports two additional equivalent
17887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   syntactic forms:
17897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * Using a literal :class:`dict` as the second argument::
17917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Point2D = TypedDict('Point2D', {'x': int, 'y': int, 'label': str})
17937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * Using keyword arguments::
17957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Point2D = TypedDict('Point2D', x=int, y=int, label=str)
17977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
17987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated-removed:: 3.11 3.13
17997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The keyword-argument syntax is deprecated in 3.11 and will be removed
18007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      in 3.13. It may also be unsupported by static type checkers.
18017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The functional syntax should also be used when any of the keys are not valid
18037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :ref:`identifiers <identifiers>`, for example because they are keywords or contain hyphens.
18047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Example::
18057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # raises SyntaxError
18077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Point2D(TypedDict):
18087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          in: int  # 'in' is a keyword
18097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          x-y: int  # name with hyphens
18107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # OK, functional syntax
18127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Point2D = TypedDict('Point2D', {'in': int, 'x-y': int})
18137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   By default, all keys must be present in a ``TypedDict``. It is possible to
18157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   mark individual keys as non-required using :data:`NotRequired`::
18167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Point2D(TypedDict):
18187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          x: int
18197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          y: int
18207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          label: NotRequired[str]
18217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # Alternative syntax
18237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Point2D = TypedDict('Point2D', {'x': int, 'y': int, 'label': NotRequired[str]})
18247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This means that a ``Point2D`` ``TypedDict`` can have the ``label``
18267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   key omitted.
18277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   It is also possible to mark all keys as non-required by default
18297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   by specifying a totality of ``False``::
18307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Point2D(TypedDict, total=False):
18327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          x: int
18337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          y: int
18347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # Alternative syntax
18367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Point2D = TypedDict('Point2D', {'x': int, 'y': int}, total=False)
18377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This means that a ``Point2D`` ``TypedDict`` can have any of the keys
18397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   omitted. A type checker is only expected to support a literal ``False`` or
18407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``True`` as the value of the ``total`` argument. ``True`` is the default,
18417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   and makes all items defined in the class body required.
18427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Individual keys of a ``total=False`` ``TypedDict`` can be marked as
18447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   required using :data:`Required`::
18457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Point2D(TypedDict, total=False):
18477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          x: Required[int]
18487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          y: Required[int]
18497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          label: str
18507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      # Alternative syntax
18527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Point2D = TypedDict('Point2D', {
18537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          'x': Required[int],
18547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          'y': Required[int],
18557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          'label': str
18567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      }, total=False)
18577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   It is possible for a ``TypedDict`` type to inherit from one or more other ``TypedDict`` types
18597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   using the class-based syntax.
18607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Usage::
18617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Point3D(Point2D):
18637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          z: int
18647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Point3D`` has three items: ``x``, ``y`` and ``z``. It is equivalent to this
18667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   definition::
18677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Point3D(TypedDict):
18697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          x: int
18707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          y: int
18717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          z: int
18727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A ``TypedDict`` cannot inherit from a non-\ ``TypedDict`` class,
18747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   except for :class:`Generic`. For example::
18757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class X(TypedDict):
18777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          x: int
18787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Y(TypedDict):
18807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          y: int
18817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Z(object): pass  # A non-TypedDict class
18837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class XY(X, Y): pass  # OK
18857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class XZ(X, Z): pass  # raises TypeError
18877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      T = TypeVar('T')
18897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class XT(X, Generic[T]): pass  # raises TypeError
18907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A ``TypedDict`` can be generic::
18927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Group(TypedDict, Generic[T]):
18947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          key: T
18957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          group: list[T]
18967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
18977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A ``TypedDict`` can be introspected via annotations dicts
18987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   (see :ref:`annotations-howto` for more information on annotations best practices),
18997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :attr:`__total__`, :attr:`__required_keys__`, and :attr:`__optional_keys__`.
19007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __total__
19027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``Point2D.__total__`` gives the value of the ``total`` argument.
19047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Example::
19057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         >>> from typing import TypedDict
19077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         >>> class Point2D(TypedDict): pass
19087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         >>> Point2D.__total__
19097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         True
19107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         >>> class Point2D(TypedDict, total=False): pass
19117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         >>> Point2D.__total__
19127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         False
19137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         >>> class Point3D(Point2D): pass
19147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         >>> Point3D.__total__
19157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         True
19167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __required_keys__
19187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      .. versionadded:: 3.9
19207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. attribute:: __optional_keys__
19227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``Point2D.__required_keys__`` and ``Point2D.__optional_keys__`` return
19247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`frozenset` objects containing required and non-required keys, respectively.
19257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Keys marked with :data:`Required` will always appear in ``__required_keys__``
19277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      and keys marked with :data:`NotRequired` will always appear in ``__optional_keys__``.
19287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      For backwards compatibility with Python 3.10 and below,
19307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      it is also possible to use inheritance to declare both required and
19317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      non-required keys in the same ``TypedDict`` . This is done by declaring a
19327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``TypedDict`` with one value for the ``total`` argument and then
19337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      inheriting from it in another ``TypedDict`` with a different value for
19347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``total``::
19357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         >>> class Point2D(TypedDict, total=False):
19377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         ...     x: int
19387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         ...     y: int
19397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         ...
19407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         >>> class Point3D(Point2D):
19417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         ...     z: int
19427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         ...
19437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         >>> Point3D.__required_keys__ == frozenset({'z'})
19447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         True
19457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         >>> Point3D.__optional_keys__ == frozenset({'x', 'y'})
19467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci         True
19477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      .. versionadded:: 3.9
19497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :pep:`589` for more examples and detailed rules of using ``TypedDict``.
19517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.8
19537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.11
19557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Added support for marking individual keys as :data:`Required` or :data:`NotRequired`.
19567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`655`.
19577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.11
19597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Added support for generic ``TypedDict``\ s.
19607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19617db96d56Sopenharmony_ciGeneric concrete collections
19627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci----------------------------
19637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19647db96d56Sopenharmony_ciCorresponding to built-in types
19657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
19667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Dict(dict, MutableMapping[KT, VT])
19687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`dict`.
19707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Useful for annotating return types. To annotate arguments it is preferred
19717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   to use an abstract collection type such as :class:`Mapping`.
19727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This type can be used as follows::
19747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def count_words(text: str) -> Dict[str, int]:
19767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
19777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
19797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`builtins.dict <dict>` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
19807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
19817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: List(list, MutableSequence[T])
19837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Generic version of :class:`list`.
19857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Useful for annotating return types. To annotate arguments it is preferred
19867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   to use an abstract collection type such as :class:`Sequence` or
19877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :class:`Iterable`.
19887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This type may be used as follows::
19907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      T = TypeVar('T', int, float)
19927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def vec2(x: T, y: T) -> List[T]:
19947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return [x, y]
19957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def keep_positives(vector: Sequence[T]) -> List[T]:
19977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return [item for item in vector if item > 0]
19987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
19997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
20007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`builtins.list <list>` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
20017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
20027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Set(set, MutableSet[T])
20047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`builtins.set <set>`.
20067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Useful for annotating return types. To annotate arguments it is preferred
20077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   to use an abstract collection type such as :class:`AbstractSet`.
20087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
20107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`builtins.set <set>` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
20117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
20127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: FrozenSet(frozenset, AbstractSet[T_co])
20147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`builtins.frozenset <frozenset>`.
20167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
20187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`builtins.frozenset <frozenset>`
20197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      now supports subscripting (``[]``).
20207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
20217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. note:: :data:`Tuple` is a special form.
20237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20247db96d56Sopenharmony_ciCorresponding to types in :mod:`collections`
20257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
20267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: DefaultDict(collections.defaultdict, MutableMapping[KT, VT])
20287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.defaultdict`.
20307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.2
20327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
20347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.defaultdict` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
20357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
20367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: OrderedDict(collections.OrderedDict, MutableMapping[KT, VT])
20387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.OrderedDict`.
20407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.7.2
20427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
20447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.OrderedDict` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
20457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
20467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: ChainMap(collections.ChainMap, MutableMapping[KT, VT])
20487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.ChainMap`.
20507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.4
20527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.6.1
20537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
20557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.ChainMap` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
20567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
20577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Counter(collections.Counter, Dict[T, int])
20597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.Counter`.
20617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.4
20637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.6.1
20647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
20667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.Counter` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
20677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
20687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Deque(deque, MutableSequence[T])
20707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.deque`.
20727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.4
20747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.6.1
20757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
20777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.deque` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
20787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
20797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20807db96d56Sopenharmony_ciOther concrete types
20817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci""""""""""""""""""""
20827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: IO
20847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           TextIO
20857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           BinaryIO
20867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Generic type ``IO[AnyStr]`` and its subclasses ``TextIO(IO[str])``
20887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   and ``BinaryIO(IO[bytes])``
20897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   represent the types of I/O streams such as returned by
20907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :func:`open`.
20917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated-removed:: 3.8 3.13
20937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The ``typing.io`` namespace is deprecated and will be removed.
20947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      These types should be directly imported from ``typing`` instead.
20957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Pattern
20977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           Match
20987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
20997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   These type aliases
21007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   correspond to the return types from :func:`re.compile` and
21017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :func:`re.match`.  These types (and the corresponding functions)
21027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   are generic in ``AnyStr`` and can be made specific by writing
21037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Pattern[str]``, ``Pattern[bytes]``, ``Match[str]``, or
21047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Match[bytes]``.
21057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated-removed:: 3.8 3.13
21077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The ``typing.re`` namespace is deprecated and will be removed.
21087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      These types should be directly imported from ``typing`` instead.
21097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
21117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Classes ``Pattern`` and ``Match`` from :mod:`re` now support ``[]``.
21127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
21137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Text
21157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Text`` is an alias for ``str``. It is provided to supply a forward
21177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   compatible path for Python 2 code: in Python 2, ``Text`` is an alias for
21187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``unicode``.
21197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Use ``Text`` to indicate that a value must contain a unicode string in
21217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   a manner that is compatible with both Python 2 and Python 3::
21227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       def add_unicode_checkmark(text: Text) -> Text:
21247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           return text + u' \u2713'
21257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.2
21277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.11
21297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Python 2 is no longer supported, and most type checkers also no longer
21307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      support type checking Python 2 code. Removal of the alias is not
21317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      currently planned, but users are encouraged to use
21327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`str` instead of ``Text``.
21337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21347db96d56Sopenharmony_ciAbstract Base Classes
21357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci---------------------
21367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21377db96d56Sopenharmony_ciCorresponding to collections in :mod:`collections.abc`
21387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
21397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: AbstractSet(Collection[T_co])
21417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.Set`.
21437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
21457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.Set` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
21467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
21477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: ByteString(Sequence[int])
21497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This type represents the types :class:`bytes`, :class:`bytearray`,
21517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   and :class:`memoryview` of byte sequences.
21527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated-removed:: 3.9 3.14
21547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Prefer ``typing_extensions.Buffer``, or a union like ``bytes | bytearray | memoryview``.
21557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Collection(Sized, Iterable[T_co], Container[T_co])
21577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.Collection`
21597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.6.0
21617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
21637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.Collection` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
21647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
21657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Container(Generic[T_co])
21677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.Container`.
21697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
21717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.Container` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
21727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
21737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: ItemsView(MappingView, AbstractSet[tuple[KT_co, VT_co]])
21757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.ItemsView`.
21777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
21797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.ItemsView` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
21807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
21817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: KeysView(MappingView, AbstractSet[KT_co])
21837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.KeysView`.
21857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
21877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.KeysView` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
21887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
21897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Mapping(Collection[KT], Generic[KT, VT_co])
21917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.Mapping`.
21937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This type can be used as follows::
21947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def get_position_in_index(word_list: Mapping[str, int], word: str) -> int:
21967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return word_list[word]
21977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
21987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
21997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.Mapping` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
22007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
22017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: MappingView(Sized)
22037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.MappingView`.
22057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
22077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.MappingView` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
22087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
22097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: MutableMapping(Mapping[KT, VT])
22117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.MutableMapping`.
22137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
22157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.MutableMapping`
22167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      now supports subscripting (``[]``).
22177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
22187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: MutableSequence(Sequence[T])
22207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.MutableSequence`.
22227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
22247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.MutableSequence`
22257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      now supports subscripting (``[]``).
22267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
22277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: MutableSet(AbstractSet[T])
22297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.MutableSet`.
22317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
22337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.MutableSet` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
22347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
22357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Sequence(Reversible[T_co], Collection[T_co])
22377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.Sequence`.
22397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
22417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.Sequence` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
22427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
22437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: ValuesView(MappingView, Collection[_VT_co])
22457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.ValuesView`.
22477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
22497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.ValuesView` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
22507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
22517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22527db96d56Sopenharmony_ciCorresponding to other types in :mod:`collections.abc`
22537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
22547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Iterable(Generic[T_co])
22567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.Iterable`.
22587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
22607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.Iterable` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
22617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
22627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Iterator(Iterable[T_co])
22647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.Iterator`.
22667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
22687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.Iterator` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
22697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
22707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Generator(Iterator[T_co], Generic[T_co, T_contra, V_co])
22727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generator can be annotated by the generic type
22747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``Generator[YieldType, SendType, ReturnType]``. For example::
22757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def echo_round() -> Generator[int, float, str]:
22777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          sent = yield 0
22787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          while sent >= 0:
22797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              sent = yield round(sent)
22807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return 'Done'
22817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Note that unlike many other generics in the typing module, the ``SendType``
22837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   of :class:`Generator` behaves contravariantly, not covariantly or
22847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   invariantly.
22857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   If your generator will only yield values, set the ``SendType`` and
22877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``ReturnType`` to ``None``::
22887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def infinite_stream(start: int) -> Generator[int, None, None]:
22907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          while True:
22917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              yield start
22927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              start += 1
22937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Alternatively, annotate your generator as having a return type of
22957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   either ``Iterable[YieldType]`` or ``Iterator[YieldType]``::
22967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
22977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def infinite_stream(start: int) -> Iterator[int]:
22987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          while True:
22997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              yield start
23007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              start += 1
23017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
23037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.Generator` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
23047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
23057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Hashable
23077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   An alias to :class:`collections.abc.Hashable`.
23097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Reversible(Iterable[T_co])
23117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.Reversible`.
23137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
23157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.Reversible` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
23167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
23177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Sized
23197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   An alias to :class:`collections.abc.Sized`.
23217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23227db96d56Sopenharmony_ciAsynchronous programming
23237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci""""""""""""""""""""""""
23247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Coroutine(Awaitable[V_co], Generic[T_co, T_contra, V_co])
23267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.Coroutine`.
23287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The variance and order of type variables
23297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   correspond to those of :class:`Generator`, for example::
23307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      from collections.abc import Coroutine
23327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      c: Coroutine[list[str], str, int]  # Some coroutine defined elsewhere
23337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      x = c.send('hi')                   # Inferred type of 'x' is list[str]
23347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      async def bar() -> None:
23357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          y = await c                    # Inferred type of 'y' is int
23367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.3
23387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
23407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.Coroutine` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
23417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
23427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: AsyncGenerator(AsyncIterator[T_co], Generic[T_co, T_contra])
23447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   An async generator can be annotated by the generic type
23467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``AsyncGenerator[YieldType, SendType]``. For example::
23477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      async def echo_round() -> AsyncGenerator[int, float]:
23497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          sent = yield 0
23507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          while sent >= 0.0:
23517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              rounded = await round(sent)
23527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              sent = yield rounded
23537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Unlike normal generators, async generators cannot return a value, so there
23557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   is no ``ReturnType`` type parameter. As with :class:`Generator`, the
23567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``SendType`` behaves contravariantly.
23577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   If your generator will only yield values, set the ``SendType`` to
23597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``None``::
23607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      async def infinite_stream(start: int) -> AsyncGenerator[int, None]:
23627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          while True:
23637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              yield start
23647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              start = await increment(start)
23657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Alternatively, annotate your generator as having a return type of
23677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   either ``AsyncIterable[YieldType]`` or ``AsyncIterator[YieldType]``::
23687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      async def infinite_stream(start: int) -> AsyncIterator[int]:
23707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          while True:
23717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              yield start
23727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              start = await increment(start)
23737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.6.1
23757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
23777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.AsyncGenerator`
23787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      now supports subscripting (``[]``).
23797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
23807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: AsyncIterable(Generic[T_co])
23827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.AsyncIterable`.
23847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.2
23867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
23887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.AsyncIterable` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
23897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
23907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: AsyncIterator(AsyncIterable[T_co])
23927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.AsyncIterator`.
23947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.2
23967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
23977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
23987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.AsyncIterator` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
23997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
24007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Awaitable(Generic[T_co])
24027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`collections.abc.Awaitable`.
24047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.2
24067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
24087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`collections.abc.Awaitable` now supports subscripting (``[]``).
24097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
24107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24127db96d56Sopenharmony_ciContext manager types
24137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci"""""""""""""""""""""
24147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: ContextManager(Generic[T_co])
24167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`contextlib.AbstractContextManager`.
24187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.4
24207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.6.0
24217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
24237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`contextlib.AbstractContextManager`
24247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      now supports subscripting (``[]``).
24257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
24267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: AsyncContextManager(Generic[T_co])
24287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A generic version of :class:`contextlib.AbstractAsyncContextManager`.
24307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.4
24327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.6.2
24337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. deprecated:: 3.9
24357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :class:`contextlib.AbstractAsyncContextManager`
24367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      now supports subscripting (``[]``).
24377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      See :pep:`585` and :ref:`types-genericalias`.
24387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24397db96d56Sopenharmony_ciProtocols
24407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci---------
24417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24427db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThese protocols are decorated with :func:`runtime_checkable`.
24437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: SupportsAbs
24457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    An ABC with one abstract method ``__abs__`` that is covariant
24477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    in its return type.
24487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: SupportsBytes
24507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    An ABC with one abstract method ``__bytes__``.
24527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: SupportsComplex
24547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    An ABC with one abstract method ``__complex__``.
24567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: SupportsFloat
24587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    An ABC with one abstract method ``__float__``.
24607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: SupportsIndex
24627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    An ABC with one abstract method ``__index__``.
24647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    .. versionadded:: 3.8
24667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: SupportsInt
24687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    An ABC with one abstract method ``__int__``.
24707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: SupportsRound
24727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    An ABC with one abstract method ``__round__``
24747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci    that is covariant in its return type.
24757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24767db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFunctions and decorators
24777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci------------------------
24787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. function:: cast(typ, val)
24807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Cast a value to a type.
24827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This returns the value unchanged.  To the type checker this
24847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   signals that the return value has the designated type, but at
24857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   runtime we intentionally don't check anything (we want this
24867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   to be as fast as possible).
24877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. function:: assert_type(val, typ, /)
24897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Ask a static type checker to confirm that *val* has an inferred type of *typ*.
24917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   At runtime this does nothing: it returns the first argument unchanged with no
24937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   checks or side effects, no matter the actual type of the argument.
24947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   When a static type checker encounters a call to ``assert_type()``, it
24967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   emits an error if the value is not of the specified type::
24977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
24987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       def greet(name: str) -> None:
24997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           assert_type(name, str)  # OK, inferred type of `name` is `str`
25007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           assert_type(name, int)  # type checker error
25017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This function is useful for ensuring the type checker's understanding of a
25037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   script is in line with the developer's intentions::
25047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       def complex_function(arg: object):
25067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           # Do some complex type-narrowing logic,
25077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           # after which we hope the inferred type will be `int`
25087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           ...
25097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           # Test whether the type checker correctly understands our function
25107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           assert_type(arg, int)
25117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.11
25137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. function:: assert_never(arg, /)
25157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Ask a static type checker to confirm that a line of code is unreachable.
25177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Example::
25197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       def int_or_str(arg: int | str) -> None:
25217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           match arg:
25227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci               case int():
25237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci                   print("It's an int")
25247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci               case str():
25257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci                   print("It's a str")
25267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci               case _ as unreachable:
25277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci                   assert_never(unreachable)
25287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Here, the annotations allow the type checker to infer that the
25307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   last case can never execute, because ``arg`` is either
25317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   an :class:`int` or a :class:`str`, and both options are covered by
25327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   earlier cases.
25337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   If a type checker finds that a call to ``assert_never()`` is
25347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   reachable, it will emit an error. For example, if the type annotation
25357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   for ``arg`` was instead ``int | str | float``, the type checker would
25367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   emit an error pointing out that ``unreachable`` is of type :class:`float`.
25377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For a call to ``assert_never`` to pass type checking, the inferred type of
25387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   the argument passed in must be the bottom type, :data:`Never`, and nothing
25397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   else.
25407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   At runtime, this throws an exception when called.
25427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. seealso::
25447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      `Unreachable Code and Exhaustiveness Checking
25457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      <https://typing.readthedocs.io/en/latest/source/unreachable.html>`__ has more
25467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      information about exhaustiveness checking with static typing.
25477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.11
25497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. function:: reveal_type(obj, /)
25517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Reveal the inferred static type of an expression.
25537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   When a static type checker encounters a call to this function,
25557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   it emits a diagnostic with the type of the argument. For example::
25567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      x: int = 1
25587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      reveal_type(x)  # Revealed type is "builtins.int"
25597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This can be useful when you want to debug how your type checker
25617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   handles a particular piece of code.
25627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The function returns its argument unchanged, which allows using
25647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   it within an expression::
25657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      x = reveal_type(1)  # Revealed type is "builtins.int"
25677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Most type checkers support ``reveal_type()`` anywhere, even if the
25697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   name is not imported from ``typing``. Importing the name from
25707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``typing`` allows your code to run without runtime errors and
25717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   communicates intent more clearly.
25727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   At runtime, this function prints the runtime type of its argument to stderr
25747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   and returns it unchanged::
25757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      x = reveal_type(1)  # prints "Runtime type is int"
25777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      print(x)  # prints "1"
25787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.11
25807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. decorator:: dataclass_transform
25827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :data:`~typing.dataclass_transform` may be used to
25847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   decorate a class, metaclass, or a function that is itself a decorator.
25857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The presence of ``@dataclass_transform()`` tells a static type checker that the
25867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   decorated object performs runtime "magic" that
25877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   transforms a class, giving it :func:`dataclasses.dataclass`-like behaviors.
25887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Example usage with a decorator function::
25907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      T = TypeVar("T")
25927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @dataclass_transform()
25947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def create_model(cls: type[T]) -> type[T]:
25957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
25967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          return cls
25977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
25987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @create_model
25997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class CustomerModel:
26007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          id: int
26017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          name: str
26027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   On a base class::
26047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @dataclass_transform()
26067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class ModelBase: ...
26077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class CustomerModel(ModelBase):
26097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          id: int
26107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          name: str
26117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   On a metaclass::
26137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @dataclass_transform()
26157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class ModelMeta(type): ...
26167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class ModelBase(metaclass=ModelMeta): ...
26187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class CustomerModel(ModelBase):
26207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          id: int
26217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          name: str
26227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The ``CustomerModel`` classes defined above will
26247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   be treated by type checkers similarly to classes created with
26257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :func:`@dataclasses.dataclass <dataclasses.dataclass>`.
26267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For example, type checkers will assume these classes have
26277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``__init__`` methods that accept ``id`` and ``name``.
26287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The decorated class, metaclass, or function may accept the following bool
26307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   arguments which type checkers will assume have the same effect as they
26317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   would have on the
26327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :func:`@dataclasses.dataclass<dataclasses.dataclass>` decorator: ``init``,
26337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``eq``, ``order``, ``unsafe_hash``, ``frozen``, ``match_args``,
26347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``kw_only``, and ``slots``. It must be possible for the value of these
26357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   arguments (``True`` or ``False``) to be statically evaluated.
26367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The arguments to the ``dataclass_transform`` decorator can be used to
26387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   customize the default behaviors of the decorated class, metaclass, or
26397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   function:
26407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * ``eq_default`` indicates whether the ``eq`` parameter is assumed to be
26427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     ``True`` or ``False`` if it is omitted by the caller.
26437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * ``order_default`` indicates whether the ``order`` parameter is
26447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     assumed to be True or False if it is omitted by the caller.
26457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * ``kw_only_default`` indicates whether the ``kw_only`` parameter is
26467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     assumed to be True or False if it is omitted by the caller.
26477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * ``field_specifiers`` specifies a static list of supported classes
26487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     or functions that describe fields, similar to ``dataclasses.field()``.
26497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * Arbitrary other keyword arguments are accepted in order to allow for
26507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     possible future extensions.
26517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Type checkers recognize the following optional arguments on field
26537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   specifiers:
26547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * ``init`` indicates whether the field should be included in the
26567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     synthesized ``__init__`` method. If unspecified, ``init`` defaults to
26577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     ``True``.
26587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * ``default`` provides the default value for the field.
26597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * ``default_factory`` provides a runtime callback that returns the
26607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     default value for the field. If neither ``default`` nor
26617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     ``default_factory`` are specified, the field is assumed to have no
26627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     default value and must be provided a value when the class is
26637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     instantiated.
26647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * ``factory`` is an alias for ``default_factory``.
26657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * ``kw_only`` indicates whether the field should be marked as
26667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     keyword-only. If ``True``, the field will be keyword-only. If
26677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     ``False``, it will not be keyword-only. If unspecified, the value of
26687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     the ``kw_only`` parameter on the object decorated with
26697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     ``dataclass_transform`` will be used, or if that is unspecified, the
26707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     value of ``kw_only_default`` on ``dataclass_transform`` will be used.
26717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   * ``alias`` provides an alternative name for the field. This alternative
26727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci     name is used in the synthesized ``__init__`` method.
26737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   At runtime, this decorator records its arguments in the
26757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``__dataclass_transform__`` attribute on the decorated object.
26767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   It has no other runtime effect.
26777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :pep:`681` for more details.
26797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.11
26817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. decorator:: overload
26837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The ``@overload`` decorator allows describing functions and methods
26857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   that support multiple different combinations of argument types. A series
26867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   of ``@overload``-decorated definitions must be followed by exactly one
26877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   non-``@overload``-decorated definition (for the same function/method).
26887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The ``@overload``-decorated definitions are for the benefit of the
26897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   type checker only, since they will be overwritten by the
26907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   non-``@overload``-decorated definition, while the latter is used at
26917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   runtime but should be ignored by a type checker.  At runtime, calling
26927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   a ``@overload``-decorated function directly will raise
26937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :exc:`NotImplementedError`. An example of overload that gives a more
26947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   precise type than can be expressed using a union or a type variable::
26957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
26967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @overload
26977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def process(response: None) -> None:
26987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
26997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @overload
27007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def process(response: int) -> tuple[int, str]:
27017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
27027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @overload
27037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def process(response: bytes) -> str:
27047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
27057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def process(response):
27067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          <actual implementation>
27077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   See :pep:`484` for more details and comparison with other typing semantics.
27097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.11
27117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Overloaded functions can now be introspected at runtime using
27127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :func:`get_overloads`.
27137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. function:: get_overloads(func)
27167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Return a sequence of :func:`@overload <overload>`-decorated definitions for
27187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   *func*. *func* is the function object for the implementation of the
27197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   overloaded function. For example, given the definition of ``process`` in
27207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   the documentation for :func:`@overload <overload>`,
27217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``get_overloads(process)`` will return a sequence of three function objects
27227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   for the three defined overloads. If called on a function with no overloads,
27237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``get_overloads()`` returns an empty sequence.
27247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``get_overloads()`` can be used for introspecting an overloaded function at
27267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   runtime.
27277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.11
27297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. function:: clear_overloads()
27327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Clear all registered overloads in the internal registry. This can be used
27347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   to reclaim the memory used by the registry.
27357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.11
27377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. decorator:: final
27407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A decorator to indicate to type checkers that the decorated method
27427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   cannot be overridden, and the decorated class cannot be subclassed.
27437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For example::
27447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Base:
27467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          @final
27477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def done(self) -> None:
27487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              ...
27497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Sub(Base):
27507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def done(self) -> None:  # Error reported by type checker
27517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci              ...
27527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @final
27547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Leaf:
27557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
27567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Other(Leaf):  # Error reported by type checker
27577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          ...
27587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   There is no runtime checking of these properties. See :pep:`591` for
27607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   more details.
27617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.8
27637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.11
27657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      The decorator will now set the ``__final__`` attribute to ``True``
27667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      on the decorated object. Thus, a check like
27677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      ``if getattr(obj, "__final__", False)`` can be used at runtime
27687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      to determine whether an object ``obj`` has been marked as final.
27697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      If the decorated object does not support setting attributes,
27707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      the decorator returns the object unchanged without raising an exception.
27717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. decorator:: no_type_check
27747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Decorator to indicate that annotations are not type hints.
27767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This works as class or function :term:`decorator`.  With a class, it
27787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   applies recursively to all methods and classes defined in that class
27797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   (but not to methods defined in its superclasses or subclasses).
27807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This mutates the function(s) in place.
27827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. decorator:: no_type_check_decorator
27847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Decorator to give another decorator the :func:`no_type_check` effect.
27867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This wraps the decorator with something that wraps the decorated
27887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   function in :func:`no_type_check`.
27897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. decorator:: type_check_only
27917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Decorator to mark a class or function to be unavailable at runtime.
27937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This decorator is itself not available at runtime. It is mainly
27957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   intended to mark classes that are defined in type stub files if
27967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   an implementation returns an instance of a private class::
27977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
27987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      @type_check_only
27997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Response:  # private or not available at runtime
28007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          code: int
28017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          def get_header(self, name: str) -> str: ...
28027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def fetch_response() -> Response: ...
28047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Note that returning instances of private classes is not recommended.
28067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   It is usually preferable to make such classes public.
28077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28087db96d56Sopenharmony_ciIntrospection helpers
28097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci---------------------
28107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. function:: get_type_hints(obj, globalns=None, localns=None, include_extras=False)
28127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Return a dictionary containing type hints for a function, method, module
28147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   or class object.
28157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   This is often the same as ``obj.__annotations__``. In addition,
28177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   forward references encoded as string literals are handled by evaluating
28187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   them in ``globals`` and ``locals`` namespaces. For a class ``C``, return
28197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   a dictionary constructed by merging all the ``__annotations__`` along
28207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``C.__mro__`` in reverse order.
28217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The function recursively replaces all ``Annotated[T, ...]`` with ``T``,
28237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   unless ``include_extras`` is set to ``True`` (see :class:`Annotated` for
28247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   more information). For example::
28257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       class Student(NamedTuple):
28277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           name: Annotated[str, 'some marker']
28287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       get_type_hints(Student) == {'name': str}
28307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       get_type_hints(Student, include_extras=False) == {'name': str}
28317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       get_type_hints(Student, include_extras=True) == {
28327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci           'name': Annotated[str, 'some marker']
28337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci       }
28347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. note::
28367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :func:`get_type_hints` does not work with imported
28387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :ref:`type aliases <type-aliases>` that include forward references.
28397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Enabling postponed evaluation of annotations (:pep:`563`) may remove
28407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      the need for most forward references.
28417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.9
28437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Added ``include_extras`` parameter as part of :pep:`593`.
28447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionchanged:: 3.11
28467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Previously, ``Optional[t]`` was added for function and method annotations
28477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      if a default value equal to ``None`` was set.
28487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Now the annotation is returned unchanged.
28497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. function:: get_origin(tp)
28517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Get the unsubscripted version of a type: for a typing object of the form
28537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``X[Y, Z, ...]`` return ``X``. If ``X`` is a generic alias for a builtin or
28547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   :mod:`collections` class, it gets normalized to the original class.
28557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   If ``X`` is an instance of :class:`ParamSpecArgs` or :class:`ParamSpecKwargs`,
28567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   return the underlying :class:`ParamSpec`.
28577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Return ``None`` for unsupported objects.
28587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Examples::
28597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      assert get_origin(str) is None
28617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      assert get_origin(Dict[str, int]) is dict
28627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      assert get_origin(Union[int, str]) is Union
28637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      P = ParamSpec('P')
28647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      assert get_origin(P.args) is P
28657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      assert get_origin(P.kwargs) is P
28667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.8
28687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. function:: get_args(tp)
28707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Get type arguments with all substitutions performed: for a typing object
28727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   of the form ``X[Y, Z, ...]`` return ``(Y, Z, ...)``.
28737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   If ``X`` is a union or :class:`Literal` contained in another
28747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   generic type, the order of ``(Y, Z, ...)`` may be different from the order
28757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   of the original arguments ``[Y, Z, ...]`` due to type caching.
28767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Return ``()`` for unsupported objects.
28777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Examples::
28787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      assert get_args(int) == ()
28807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      assert get_args(Dict[int, str]) == (int, str)
28817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      assert get_args(Union[int, str]) == (int, str)
28827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.8
28847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. function:: is_typeddict(tp)
28867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   Check if a type is a :class:`TypedDict`.
28887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For example::
28907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      class Film(TypedDict):
28927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          title: str
28937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          year: int
28947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      is_typeddict(Film)  # => True
28967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      is_typeddict(list | str)  # => False
28977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
28987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.10
28997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: ForwardRef
29017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A class used for internal typing representation of string forward references.
29037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   For example, ``List["SomeClass"]`` is implicitly transformed into
29047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   ``List[ForwardRef("SomeClass")]``.  This class should not be instantiated by
29057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   a user, but may be used by introspection tools.
29067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. note::
29087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      :pep:`585` generic types such as ``list["SomeClass"]`` will not be
29097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      implicitly transformed into ``list[ForwardRef("SomeClass")]`` and thus
29107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      will not automatically resolve to ``list[SomeClass]``.
29117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.7.4
29137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29147db96d56Sopenharmony_ciConstant
29157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci--------
29167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: TYPE_CHECKING
29187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   A special constant that is assumed to be ``True`` by 3rd party static
29207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   type checkers. It is ``False`` at runtime. Usage::
29217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      if TYPE_CHECKING:
29237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          import expensive_mod
29247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      def fun(arg: 'expensive_mod.SomeType') -> None:
29267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci          local_var: expensive_mod.AnotherType = other_fun()
29277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   The first type annotation must be enclosed in quotes, making it a
29297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   "forward reference", to hide the ``expensive_mod`` reference from the
29307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   interpreter runtime.  Type annotations for local variables are not
29317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   evaluated, so the second annotation does not need to be enclosed in quotes.
29327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. note::
29347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      If ``from __future__ import annotations`` is used,
29367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      annotations are not evaluated at function definition time.
29377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      Instead, they are stored as strings in ``__annotations__``.
29387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      This makes it unnecessary to use quotes around the annotation
29397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci      (see :pep:`563`).
29407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci   .. versionadded:: 3.5.2
29427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29437db96d56Sopenharmony_ciDeprecation Timeline of Major Features
29447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci======================================
29457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29467db96d56Sopenharmony_ciCertain features in ``typing`` are deprecated and may be removed in a future
29477db96d56Sopenharmony_civersion of Python. The following table summarizes major deprecations for your
29487db96d56Sopenharmony_ciconvenience. This is subject to change, and not all deprecations are listed.
29497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci
29507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci+----------------------------------+---------------+-------------------+----------------+
29517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci|  Feature                         | Deprecated in | Projected removal | PEP/issue      |
29527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci+==================================+===============+===================+================+
29537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci|  ``typing.io`` and ``typing.re`` | 3.8           | 3.13              | :issue:`38291` |
29547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci|  submodules                      |               |                   |                |
29557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci+----------------------------------+---------------+-------------------+----------------+
29567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci|  ``typing`` versions of standard | 3.9           | Undecided         | :pep:`585`     |
29577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci|  collections                     |               |                   |                |
29587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci+----------------------------------+---------------+-------------------+----------------+
29597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci|  ``typing.ByteString``           | 3.9           | 3.14              | :gh:`91896`    |
29607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci+----------------------------------+---------------+-------------------+----------------+
29617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci|  ``typing.Text``                 | 3.11          | Undecided         | :gh:`92332`    |
29627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci+----------------------------------+---------------+-------------------+----------------+
2963