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Google Python team 2022-05-25 12:15:47 -07:00 committed by Gregory P. Smith [Google LLC]
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@ -212,12 +212,7 @@ that the arguments are actually unused.
### 2.2 Imports
Use `import` statements for packages and modules only, not for individual
classes or functions. Classes imported from the
[`typing` module](#typing-imports), [`collections.abc` module](#typing-imports),
[`typing_extensions` module](https://github.com/python/typing/tree/master/typing_extensions),
and redirects from the
[six.moves module](https://six.readthedocs.io/#module-six.moves)
are exempt from this rule.
classes or functions.
<a id="s2.2.1-definition"></a>
<a id="221-definition"></a>
@ -272,6 +267,18 @@ Do not use relative names in imports. Even if the module is in the same package,
use the full package name. This helps prevent unintentionally importing a
package twice.
<a id="imports-exemptions"></a>
##### 2.2.4.1 Exemptions
Exemptions from this rule:
* Classes imported from the [`typing` module](#typing-imports).
* Classes imported from the [`collections.abc` module](#typing-imports).
* Classes imported from the
[`typing_extensions` module](https://github.com/python/typing/tree/HEAD/typing_extensions).
* Redirects from the
[six.moves module](https://six.readthedocs.io/#module-six.moves).
<a id="s2.3-packages"></a>
<a id="23-packages"></a>
@ -722,14 +729,12 @@ Yes: for key in adict: ...
if obj in alist: ...
for line in afile: ...
for k, v in adict.items(): ...
for k, v in six.iteritems(adict): ...
```
```python
No: for key in adict.keys(): ...
if not adict.has_key(key): ...
for line in afile.readlines(): ...
for k, v in dict.iteritems(): ...
```
<a id="s2.9-generators"></a>
@ -744,7 +749,7 @@ Use generators as needed.
<a id="291-definition"></a>
<a id="generators-definition"></a>
#### 2.9 Definition
#### 2.9.1 Definition
A generator function returns an iterator that yields a value each time it
executes a yield statement. After it yields a value, the runtime state of the
@ -766,7 +771,8 @@ creates an entire list of values at once.
<a id="generators-cons"></a>
#### 2.9.3 Cons
None.
Local variables in the generator will not be garbage collected until the
generator is either consumed to exhaustion or itself garbage collected.
<a id="s2.9.4-decision"></a>
<a id="294-decision"></a>
@ -777,6 +783,11 @@ None.
Fine. Use "Yields:" rather than "Returns:" in the docstring for generator
functions.
If the generator manages an expensive resource, make sure to force the clean up.
A good way to do the clean up is by wrapping the generator with a context
manager [PEP-0533](https://peps.python.org/pep-0533/).
<a id="s2.10-lambda-functions"></a>
<a id="210-lambda-functions"></a>
@ -1415,14 +1426,6 @@ In code that may execute on versions as old as 3.5 rather than >= 3.7, import:
from __future__ import generator_stop
```
For legacy code with the burden of continuing to support 2.7, import:
```python
from __future__ import absolute_import
from __future__ import division
from __future__ import print_function
```
For more information read the
[Python future statement definitions](https://docs.python.org/3/library/__future__.html)
documentation.
@ -1433,19 +1436,7 @@ feature a specific future import enables in your code today, keeping it in place
in the file prevents later modifications of the code from inadvertently
depending on the older behavior.
Use other `from __future__` import statements as you see fit. We did not include
`unicode_literals` in our recommendations for 2.7 as it was not a clear win due
to implicit default codec conversion consequences it introduced in many places
within 2.7. Most dual-version 2-and-3 code was better off with explicit use of
`b''` and `u''` bytes and unicode string literals where necessary.
##### The six, future, and past libraries
When your project still needs to support use under both Python 2 and 3, use the
[six](https://pypi.org/project/six/),
[future](https://pypi.org/project/future/), and
[past](https://pypi.org/project/past/) libraries as you see fit. They exist to
make your code cleaner and life easier.
Use other `from __future__` import statements as you see fit.
<a id="s2.21-type-annotated-code"></a>
<a id="s2.21-typed-code"></a>
@ -1455,11 +1446,10 @@ make your code cleaner and life easier.
<a id="typed-code"></a>
### 2.21 Type Annotated Code
You can annotate Python 3 code with type hints according to
You can annotate Python code with type hints according to
[PEP-484](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0484/), and type-check the code at
build time with a type checking tool like [pytype](https://github.com/google/pytype).
Type annotations can be in the source or in a
[stub pyi file](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0484/#stub-files). Whenever
possible, annotations should be in the source. Use pyi files for third-party or
@ -2129,8 +2119,8 @@ If your class has public attributes, they should be documented here in an
class SampleClass:
"""Summary of class here.
Longer class information....
Longer class information....
Longer class information...
Longer class information...
Attributes:
likes_spam: A boolean indicating if we like SPAM or not.
@ -2146,6 +2136,34 @@ class SampleClass:
"""Performs operation blah."""
```
All class docstrings should start with a one-line summary that describes what
the class instance represents. This implies that subclasses of `Exception`
should also describe what the exception represents, and not the context in which
it might occur. The class docstring should not repeat unnecessary information,
such as that the class is a class.
```python
class CheeseShopAddress:
"""The address of a cheese shop.
...
"""
class OutOfCheeseError(Exception):
"""No more cheese is available."""
```
```python
class CheeseShopAddress:
"""Class that describes the address of a cheese shop.
...
"""
class OutOfCheeseError(Exception):
"""Raised when no more cheese is available."""
```
<a id="s3.8.5-block-and-inline-comments"></a>
<a id="comments-in-block-and-inline"></a>
<a id="s3.8.5-comments-in-block-and-inline"></a>
@ -2542,9 +2560,7 @@ grouped from most generic to least generic:
1. Python future import statements. For example:
```python
from __future__ import absolute_import
from __future__ import division
from __future__ import print_function
from __future__ import annotations
```
See [above](#from-future-imports) for more information about those.
@ -2945,13 +2961,23 @@ the function into smaller and more manageable pieces.
* Familiarize yourself with
[PEP-484](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0484/).
* In methods, only annotate `self`, or `cls` if it is necessary for proper
type information. e.g., `@classmethod def create(cls: Type[T]) -> T: return
cls()`
type information. e.g.,
```python
@classmethod
def create(cls: Type[T]) -> T:
return cls()
```
* Similarly, don't feel compelled to annotate the return value of `__init__`
(where `None` is the only valid option).
* If any other variable or a returned type should not be expressed, use `Any`.
* You are not required to annotate all the functions in a module.
- At least annotate your public APIs.
- Use judgment to get to a good balance between safety and clarity on the
one hand, and flexibility on the other.
@ -3245,8 +3271,7 @@ def add(a: AddableType, b: AddableType) -> AddableType:
```
A common predefined type variable in the `typing` module is `AnyStr`. Use it for
multiple annotations that can be `bytes` or `unicode` and must all be the same
type.
multiple annotations that can be `bytes` or `str` and must all be the same type.
```python
from typing import AnyStr
@ -3283,46 +3308,16 @@ No:
<a id="typing-strings"></a>
#### 3.19.11 String types
The proper type for annotating strings depends on what versions of Python the
code is intended for.
> Do not use `typing.Text` in new code. It's only for Python 2/3 compatibility.
Prefer to use `str`, though `Text` is also acceptable. Be consistent in using
one or the other. For code that deals with binary data, use `bytes`. For Python
2 compatible code that processes text data (`str` or `unicode` in Python 2,
`str` in Python 3), use `Text`.
Use `str` for string/text data. For code that deals with binary data, use
`bytes`.
```python
def deals_with_text_data_in_py3(x: str) -> str:
def deals_with_text_data(x: str) -> str:
...
def deals_with_binary_data(x: bytes) -> bytes:
...
def py2_compatible_text_data_processor(x: Text) -> Text:
...
```
In some uncommon Python 2 compatibility cases, `str` may make sense instead of
`Text`, typically to aid compatibility when the return types aren't the same
between Python 2 and Python 3. Never use `unicode` as it doesn't exist in Python
3. The reason this discrepancy exists is because `str` means something different
in Python 2 than in Python 3.
No:
```python
def py2_code(x: str) -> unicode:
...
```
If the type can be either bytes or text, use `Union`, with the appropriate text
type.
```python
from typing import Text, Union
...
def py3_only(x: Union[bytes, str]) -> Union[bytes, str]:
...
def py2_compatible(x: Union[bytes, Text]) -> Union[bytes, Text]:
...
```
If all the string types of a function are always the same, for example if the
@ -3336,11 +3331,11 @@ return type is the same as the argument type in the code above, use
<a id="typing-imports"></a>
#### 3.19.12 Imports For Typing
For classes from the `typing` and `collections.abc` modules for use in
annotations, always import the class itself. This keeps common annotations more
concise and matches typing practices used around the world. You are explicitly
allowed to import multiple specific classes on one line from the `typing` and
`collections.abc` modules. Ex:
For symbols from the `typing` and `collections.abc` modules used to support
static analysis and type checking, always import the symbol itself. This keeps
common annotations more concise and matches typing practices used around the
world. You are explicitly allowed to import multiple specific classes on one
line from the `typing` and `collections.abc` modules. Ex:
```python
from collections.abc import Mapping, Sequence