ruff is faster and handle everything we had prior.
isort configuration done based on the indication from
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/4670, previousely based on
reorder-python-import (#11896)
flake8-docstrings was a wrapper around pydocstyle (now archived) that
explicitly asks to use ruff in https://github.com/PyCQA/pydocstyle/pull/658.
flake8-typing-import is useful mainly for project that support python 3.7
and the one useful check will be implemented in https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/2302
We need to keep blacken-doc because ruff does not handle detection
of python code inside .md and .rst. The direct link to the repo is
now used to avoid a redirection.
Manual fixes:
- Lines that became too long
- % formatting that was not done automatically
- type: ignore that were moved around
- noqa of hard to fix issues (UP031 generally)
- fmt: off and fmt: on that is not really identical
between black and ruff
- autofix re-order in pre-commit from faster to slower
Co-authored-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
Change our mypy configuration to disallow untyped defs by default, which ensures *new* files added to the code base are fully typed.
To avoid having to type-annotate everything now, add `# mypy: allow-untyped-defs` to files which are not fully type annotated yet.
As we fully type annotate those modules, we can then just remove that directive from the top.
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.
Also delay calling tearDown() when --pdb is given, so users still have
access to the instance variables (which are usually cleaned up during tearDown())
when debugging.
Fix#6947
Without this, the second time it tries to stop in a parametrized
function it raises instead:
`ValueError: --trace can't be used with a fixture named func!`
Implementation idea, test (and changelog tweaks) thanks to blueyed
Co-Authored-By: Ronny Pfannschmidt <opensource@ronnypfannschmidt.de>
Co-Authored-By: Daniel Hahler <git@thequod.de>
Add a very lax mypy configuration, add it to tox -e linting, and
fix/ignore the few errors that come up. The idea is to get it running
before diving in too much.
This enables:
- Progressively adding type annotations and enabling more strict
options, which will improve the codebase (IMO).
- Annotating the public API in-line, and eventually exposing it to
library users who use type checkers (with a py.typed file).
Though, none of this is done yet.
Refs https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest/issues/3342.
Add a very lax mypy configuration, add it to tox -e linting, and
fix/ignore the few errors that come up. The idea is to get it running
before diving in too much.
This enables:
- Progressively adding type annotations and enabling more strict
options, which will improve the codebase (IMO).
- Annotating the public API in-line, and eventually exposing it to
library users who use type checkers (with a py.typed file).
Though, none of this is done yet.
Refs https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest/issues/3342.
This reverts commit e88aa957ae, reversing
changes made to 1410d3dc9a.
I do not think it warrants an option anymore, and there is a way to
achieve this via `--pdbcls` if needed.