mypy stubs recently changed warnings.catch_warnings to a Generic, in
order to have proper overloads depending on the parameters passed to it, whihc
triggers this mypy error now when we subclass it:
src/_pytest/recwarn.py:170: error: Missing type parameters for generic type "catch_warnings" [type-arg]
For our porpuses the parameter is not relevant (we always use record=True), so
decided to just ignore the type error.
New Sphinx added support for overloads and always displays them all with
full type annotations etc. This regresses the API reference for
overloaded functions like `fixture()`, `warns()`, `raises()` and friends
to become impossible to read.
I tried various workarounds but none worked except this one.
It's better to have the documentation in one place, instead
of having some in the docstring and some additional
information added to the reference documentation in
`reference.rst`.
* [pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate
* [pre-commit.ci] auto fixes from pre-commit.com hooks
for more information, see https://pre-commit.ci
Co-authored-by: pre-commit-ci[bot] <66853113+pre-commit-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
* Prefix contextmanagers with module name in doc examples
* Import pytest explicitly for doctests
Co-authored-by: Bruno Oliveira <nicoddemus@gmail.com>
In order to allow users to type annotate fixtures they request, the
types need to be imported from the `pytest` namespace. They are/were
always available to import from the `_pytest` namespace, but that is
not guaranteed to be stable.
These types are only exported for the purpose of typing. Specifically,
the following are *not* public:
- Construction (`__init__`)
- Subclassing
- staticmethods and classmethods
We try to combat them being used anyway by:
- Marking the classes as `@final` when possible (already done).
- Not documenting private stuff in the API Reference.
- Using `_`-prefixed names or marking as `:meta private:` for private
stuff.
- Adding a keyword-only `_ispytest=False` to private constructors,
warning if False, and changing pytest itself to pass True. In the
future it will (hopefully) become a hard error.
Hopefully that will be enough.
This indicates at least for people using type checkers that these
classes are not designed for inheritance and we make no stability
guarantees regarding inheritance of them.
Currently this doesn't show up in the docs. Sphinx does actually support
`@final`, however it only works when imported directly from `typing`,
while we import from `_pytest.compat`.
In the future there might also be a `@sealed` decorator which would
cover some more cases.
This prevents referring to a generic type without filling in its generic
type parameters.
The FixtureDef typing might need some more refining in the future.
This option checks even functions which are not annotated. It's a good
step to ensure that existing type annotation are correct.
In a Pareto fashion, the last few holdouts are always the ugliest,
beware.
This allows for e.g. Jedi to infer types (it checks the name).
It was only used to support Python 3.5.0/3.5.1, where this is is not
available in the `typing` module.
Ref: https://github.com/davidhalter/jedi/issues/1472
Uses `TYPE_CHECKING = False` in `_pytest.outcomes` to avoid having to
work around circular import.