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Fix/attrs init overload #19104
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Fix/attrs init overload #19104
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I'm afraid this will break horribly down the road. Any custom To see this actually causing trouble (maybe I'm reading the code wrong, after all), please try adding a testcase with such overridden |
Hello! First of all, thank you for your detailed comment. From what I understand, I don’t believe there’s anything wrong with the code I wrote to address the issue. However, based on your feedback, it seems you’re suggesting that instead of returning None, it would be better to explicitly fail when a custom init is detected—something like: (This is my first PR, and English is not my first language, so I really appreciate your understanding in case I misunderstood anything) |
Huh, not exactly, raising a However, on second thought we usually avoid producing error messages when some construct is not supported or cannot be expressed statically. It might be wiser to fall back to Any in that case and accept the call as-is, even if the arguments do not match. I'm not sure which of the options is better. To explain my point about "potential problems" caused by overloaded or even just manually defined from typing import overload
import attrs
@attrs.frozen(init=False)
class C:
x: "int | str"
@overload
def __init__(self, x: int) -> None: ...
@overload
def __init__(self, x: str) -> None: ...
def __init__(self, x: "int | str") -> None:
self.__attrs_init__(x)
obj = C(1)
attrs.evolve(obj, x=2)
attrs.evolve(obj, x="2") # E: ... - False positive import attrs
@attrs.frozen(init=False)
class C:
x: "int | str"
def __init__(self, x: "int | str", y: bool) -> None:
self.__attrs_init__(x)
obj = C(1, False)
attrs.evolve(obj, x=2) # False negative, error at runtime |
Thank you so much for the detailed explanation. It was really helpful and I believe it will greatly assist me in resolving the issue. Among the approaches you suggested, I feel that using I'll revise the code accordingly and push the changes soon. |
for more information, see https://pre-commit.ci
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I understand you may be busy, but I would really appreciate it if you could take a moment to review my latest commit. Thank you! |
I'm not sure I love the idea of returning |
Thank you for the review. I will update and upload the test cases within today. Have a great day :) |
…init__ methods in attrs classes
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…init__ methods in attrs classes
for more information, see https://pre-commit.ci
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@sterliakov Hello, After several attempts, I was able to add the test case. |
After I committed the changes to attrs.py, there were no issues reported by mypy_primer. However, the error appeared only after I committed the test cases. Based on this, I believe it might be a false positive. When comparing the importance of mypy issue #19003 with the reported error in xarray, I think resolving issue #19003 should take priority and is more critical at this point. If it turns out that the error reported in xarray is actually a valid detection — due to an argument not matching the expected type — then after this PR is merged, I will either modify the xarray source code to ignore the case where the function receives an object type, or open an issue in the xarray repository to address it. All in all, it seems that the error is an expected outcome of the changes made in this PR, and I believe it's something that should be fixed within the xarray project |
Ignore the |
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@sterliakov Hello, However, I'm now seeing an error from the GitHub bot that wasn't occurring before. From my investigation, this issue doesn’t appear to be caused by my changes. Could you please help verify whether this is a problem with the bot or something unrelated to my patch? |
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The |
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@sterliakov Hi, the updated changes are now working correctly. Could you please review my PR to see if it’s ready to be merged? |
Hello! I haven't received a response regarding my recent commits for a few days, so I just wanted to send a quick ping. Apologies for bothering you during your busy schedule! @sterliakov @JukkaL |
@sterliakov Hi, all issues have now been resolved. |
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According to mypy_primer, this change doesn't affect type check results on a corpus of open source code. ✅ |
@sterliakov @JukkaL Hello, I’m following up as I haven’t received a response for a week. I understand you must be busy, but I would really appreciate it if you could kindly check and get back to me. Thank you |
Personally I'm totally swamped right now and won't have any chance to review code outside of my primary work with enough attention for at least a few days. I'm not even the maintainer here, just a regular contributor with triager access, I don't merge PRs nor do I have a final say of what should/shouldn't be done this or other way. My reviews are essentially my personal suggestions based on what I know about I invest my free time into I can personally thank you for your contribution, every such PR makes And I need to clean my n key, there were too many typos above with this letter missing... |
I lacked understanding of how things are usually handled. I apologize if any of my actions came across as rude. Thank you so much for taking the time to review my PR, I really appreciate it! |
c = attr.evolve(c, b=Derived()) | ||
c = attr.evolve(c, b=Base()) | ||
c = attr.evolve(c, b=Other()) # E: Argument "b" to "evolve" of "C" has incompatible type "Other"; expected "Base" |
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Okay, wait, why is this error gone? There's no custom __init__
method on these classes, so shouldn't this still be rejected?
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I'll revalidate this based on evidence after I've finished modifying attrs.py
.
@@ -2266,9 +2267,10 @@ class B: | |||
T = TypeVar('T', A, B) | |||
|
|||
def f(t: T) -> T: | |||
t2 = attrs.evolve(t, x=42) # E: Argument "x" to "evolve" of "B" has incompatible type "int"; expected "str" | |||
reveal_type(t2) # N: Revealed type is "__main__.A" # N: Revealed type is "__main__.B" | |||
t2 = attrs.evolve(t, x='42') # E: Argument "x" to "evolve" of "A" has incompatible type "str"; expected "int" |
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Looking at the test changes, this looks as if evolve
was no longer checked at all
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Yes, this does seem problematic. The modified attrs.py
doesn't emit errors even in abnormal situations. I'll look into fixing it. Thank you for checking.
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I believe the issue occurred because, due to the modification, the function became too permissive by returning AnyType
even when it couldn't inspect the __init__
method.
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def _get_attrs_init_type(typ: Instance) -> CallableType | None | AnyType:
"""
Iftyp
refers to an attrs class, get the type of its initializer method.
"""
magic_attr = typ.type.get(MAGIC_ATTR_NAME)
if magic_attr is None or not magic_attr.plugin_generated:
return None
init_method = typ.type.get_method("init") or typ.type.get_method(ATTRS_INIT_NAME)
if init_method is None:
return None# case 1: normal FuncDef if isinstance(init_method, FuncDef) and isinstance(init_method.type, CallableType): init_node = typ.type.get("__init__") or typ.type.get(ATTRS_INIT_NAME) if init_node is None or not init_node.plugin_generated: return None else: return init_method.type # case 2: overloaded method if isinstance(init_method, OverloadedFuncDef) and isinstance(init_method.type, Overloaded): return AnyType(TypeOfAny.special_form) return None
I've made the following modification: this code returns AnyType
in cases where overloads are involved, but correctly raises an error in situations where it should.
(I'll update the test cases using the modified attrs.py
and commit afterward.)
Fixes #19003
This PR fixes the issue by handling the case where the init method can be an OverloadedFuncDef with CallableType items.