Python beginner - eviltoast

Good evening, everyone. I have, but one quick inquiry. What are the best resources in your opinion to learn python by yourself as a complete beginner? Thank you all

  • Martín@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    6 months ago

    If you do that, nothing will actually be checked. You need to explicitly run pyright in CI.

    Are you suggesting that you prefer to do the type validation upon execution? I’d like to have the checks done beforehand, be it in the IDE during coding or in CI. This way the feedback loop is shorter.

    Then, backwards compatibility is a big thing in python, unlike node. So when typehints were introduced in 3.5 with PEP 484, they had to be optional.

    At least Typescript defines the semantics of its type hints. Python only defines the syntax! You can have multiple type checkers that conflict with each other!

    It is a bit more complicated than that. Here’s a quote the above-mentioned PEP (3.5 was back in 2015, we’re at 3.12 now and typehints have evolved):

    Note that this PEP still explicitly does NOT prevent other uses of annotations, nor does it require (or forbid) any particular processing of annotations, even when they conform to this specification. It simply enables better coordination, as PEP 333 did for web frameworks.

    https://peps.python.org/pep-0484/

    • FizzyOrange@programming.dev
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      6 months ago

      Are you suggesting that you prefer to do the type validation upon execution?

      No. But I would like them to actually be done! If you just write some Python code and put type hints in it and don’t do anything else then those types are not checked at all. It requires some set up and a third party tool to use them properly.

      It is a bit more complicated than that. Here’s a quote

      That quote is exactly what I was saying. It does not require any particular processing or type hints.

      Type checkers can and do differ in whether they accept a particular piece of code.