* [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>
The prefixes make the API Reference docs (for e.g. `pytest.raises`,
`pytest.fixture`) uglier.
Being under `_pytest` is sufficient from a privacy perspective, so let's
drop them.
* Prefix contextmanagers with module name in doc examples
* Import pytest explicitly for doctests
Co-authored-by: Bruno Oliveira <nicoddemus@gmail.com>
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 makes mypy raise an error whenever it detects code which is
statically unreachable, e.g.
x: int
if isinstance(x, str):
... # Statement is unreachable [unreachable]
This is really neat and finds quite a few logic and typing bugs.
Sometimes the code is intentionally unreachable in terms of types, e.g.
raising TypeError when a function is given an argument with a wrong
type. In these cases a `type: ignore[unreachable]` is needed, but I
think it's a nice code hint.
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.
We barely use it; the couple places that do are not really worth the
extra dependency, I think the code is clearer without it.
Also simplifies one (regular) itertools usage.
Also improves a check and an error message in `pytest.raises`.
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.
Add some Python 3.8 type: ignores; all are already fixed in the next
mypy release, so can be removed once we upgrade.
Also move some flake8 ignores which seem to have changed places.
The typing module on these versions have these issues:
- `typing.Pattern` cannot appear in a Union since it is not considered a
class.
- `@overload` is not supported in runtime. (On the other hand, mypy
doesn't support putting it under `if False`, so we need some runtime
hack).
Refs #5751.