PEP 563 – Postponed Evaluation of Annotations
- Author:
- Łukasz Langa <lukasz at python.org>
- Discussions-To:
- Python-Dev list
- Status:
- Accepted
- Type:
- Standards Track
- Topic:
- Typing
- Created:
- 08-Sep-2017
- Python-Version:
- 3.7
- Post-History:
- 01-Nov-2017, 21-Nov-2017
- Resolution:
- Python-Dev message
Table of Contents
- Abstract
- Rationale and Goals
- Implementation
- Resolving Type Hints at Runtime
- Backwards Compatibility
- Forward References
- Rejected Ideas
- Keeping the ability to use function local state when defining annotations
- Disallowing local state usage for classes, too
- Introducing a new dictionary for the string literal form instead
- Dropping annotations with -O
- Passing string literals in annotations verbatim to
__annotations__
- Making the name of the future import more verbose
- Prior discussion
- Acknowledgements
- Copyright
Abstract
PEP 3107 introduced syntax for function annotations, but the semantics were deliberately left undefined. PEP 484 introduced a standard meaning to annotations: type hints. PEP 526 defined variable annotations, explicitly tying them with the type hinting use case.
This PEP proposes changing function annotations and variable annotations
so that they are no longer evaluated at function definition time.
Instead, they are preserved in __annotations__
in string form.
This change is being introduced gradually, starting with a
__future__
import in Python 3.7.
Rationale and Goals
PEP 3107 added support for arbitrary annotations on parts of a function definition. Just like default values, annotations are evaluated at function definition time. This creates a number of issues for the type hinting use case:
- forward references: when a type hint contains names that have not been defined yet, that definition needs to be expressed as a string literal;
- type hints are executed at module import time, which is not computationally free.
Postponing the evaluation of annotations solves both problems. NOTE: PEP 649 proposes an alternative solution to the above issues, putting this PEP in danger of being superseded.
Non-goals
Just like in PEP 484 and PEP 526, it should be emphasized that Python will remain a dynamically typed language, and the authors have no desire to ever make type hints mandatory, even by convention.
This PEP is meant to solve the problem of forward references in type annotations. There are still cases outside of annotations where forward references will require usage of string literals. Those are listed in a later section of this document.
Annotations without forced evaluation enable opportunities to improve the syntax of type hints. This idea will require its own separate PEP and is not discussed further in this document.
Non-typing usage of annotations
While annotations are still available for arbitrary use besides type checking, it is worth mentioning that the design of this PEP, as well as its precursors (PEP 484 and PEP 526), is predominantly motivated by the type hinting use case.
In Python 3.8 PEP 484 will graduate from provisional status. Other
enhancements to the Python programming language like PEP 544, PEP 557,
or PEP 560, are already being built on this basis as they depend on
type annotations and the typing
module as defined by PEP 484.
In fact, the reason PEP 484 is staying provisional in Python 3.7 is to
enable rapid evolution for another release cycle that some of the
aforementioned enhancements require.
With this in mind, uses for annotations incompatible with the aforementioned PEPs should be considered deprecated.
Implementation
With this PEP, function and variable annotations will no longer be
evaluated at definition time. Instead, a string form will be preserved
in the respective __annotations__
dictionary. Static type checkers
will see no difference in behavior, whereas tools using annotations at
runtime will have to perform postponed evaluation.
The string form is obtained from the AST during the compilation step, which means that the string form might not preserve the exact formatting of the source. Note: if an annotation was a string literal already, it will still be wrapped in a string.
Annotations need to be syntactically valid Python expressions, also when
passed as literal strings (i.e. compile(literal, '', 'eval')
).
Annotations can only use names present in the module scope as postponed
evaluation using local names is not reliable (with the sole exception of
class-level names resolved by typing.get_type_hints()
).
Note that as per PEP 526, local variable annotations are not evaluated at all since they are not accessible outside of the function’s closure.
Enabling the future behavior in Python 3.7
The functionality described above can be enabled starting from Python 3.7 using the following special import:
from __future__ import annotations
A reference implementation of this functionality is available on GitHub.
Resolving Type Hints at Runtime
To resolve an annotation at runtime from its string form to the result of the enclosed expression, user code needs to evaluate the string.
For code that uses type hints, the
typing.get_type_hints(obj, globalns=None, localns=None)
function
correctly evaluates expressions back from its string form. Note that
all valid code currently using __annotations__
should already be
doing that since a type annotation can be expressed as a string literal.
For code which uses annotations for other purposes, a regular
eval(ann, globals, locals)
call is enough to resolve the
annotation.
In both cases it’s important to consider how globals and locals affect the postponed evaluation. An annotation is no longer evaluated at the time of definition and, more importantly, in the same scope where it was defined. Consequently, using local state in annotations is no longer possible in general. As for globals, the module where the annotation was defined is the correct context for postponed evaluation.
The get_type_hints()
function automatically resolves the correct
value of globalns
for functions and classes. It also automatically
provides the correct localns
for classes.
When running eval()
,
the value of globals can be gathered in the following way:
- function objects hold a reference to their respective globals in an
attribute called
__globals__
; - classes hold the name of the module they were defined in, this can be
used to retrieve the respective globals:
cls_globals = vars(sys.modules[SomeClass.__module__])
Note that this needs to be repeated for base classes to evaluate all
__annotations__
. - modules should use their own
__dict__
.
The value of localns
cannot be reliably retrieved for functions
because in all likelihood the stack frame at the time of the call no
longer exists.
For classes, localns
can be composed by chaining vars of the given
class and its base classes (in the method resolution order). Since slots
can only be filled after the class was defined, we don’t need to consult
them for this purpose.
Runtime annotation resolution and class decorators
Metaclasses and class decorators that need to resolve annotations for the current class will fail for annotations that use the name of the current class. Example:
def class_decorator(cls):
annotations = get_type_hints(cls) # raises NameError on 'C'
print(f'Annotations for {cls}: {annotations}')
return cls
@class_decorator
class C:
singleton: 'C' = None
This was already true before this PEP. The class decorator acts on the class before it’s assigned a name in the current definition scope.
Runtime annotation resolution and TYPE_CHECKING
Sometimes there’s code that must be seen by a type checker but should
not be executed. For such situations the typing
module defines a
constant, TYPE_CHECKING
, that is considered True
during type
checking but False
at runtime. Example:
import typing
if typing.TYPE_CHECKING:
import expensive_mod
def a_func(arg: expensive_mod.SomeClass) -> None:
a_var: expensive_mod.SomeClass = arg
...
This approach is also useful when handling import cycles.
Trying to resolve annotations of a_func
at runtime using
typing.get_type_hints()
will fail since the name expensive_mod
is not defined (TYPE_CHECKING
variable being False
at runtime).
This was already true before this PEP.
Backwards Compatibility
This is a backwards incompatible change. Applications depending on
arbitrary objects to be directly present in annotations will break
if they are not using typing.get_type_hints()
or eval()
.
Annotations that depend on locals at the time of the function definition will not be resolvable later. Example:
def generate():
A = Optional[int]
class C:
field: A = 1
def method(self, arg: A) -> None: ...
return C
X = generate()
Trying to resolve annotations of X
later by using
get_type_hints(X)
will fail because A
and its enclosing scope no
longer exists. Python will make no attempt to disallow such annotations
since they can often still be successfully statically analyzed, which is
the predominant use case for annotations.
Annotations using nested classes and their respective state are still valid. They can use local names or the fully qualified name. Example:
class C:
field = 'c_field'
def method(self) -> C.field: # this is OK
...
def method(self) -> field: # this is OK
...
def method(self) -> C.D: # this is OK
...
def method(self) -> D: # this is OK
...
class D:
field2 = 'd_field'
def method(self) -> C.D.field2: # this is OK
...
def method(self) -> D.field2: # this FAILS, class D is local to C
... # and is therefore only available
# as C.D. This was already true
# before the PEP.
def method(self) -> field2: # this is OK
...
def method(self) -> field: # this FAILS, field is local to C and
# is therefore not visible to D unless
# accessed as C.field. This was already
# true before the PEP.
In the presence of an annotation that isn’t a syntactically valid expression, SyntaxError is raised at compile time. However, since names aren’t resolved at that time, no attempt is made to validate whether used names are correct or not.
Deprecation policy
Starting with Python 3.7, a __future__
import is required to use the
described functionality. No warnings are raised.
NOTE: Whether this will eventually become the default behavior is currently unclear pending decision on PEP 649. In any case, use of annotations that depend upon their eager evaluation is incompatible with both proposals and is no longer supported.
Forward References
Deliberately using a name before it was defined in the module is called
a forward reference. For the purpose of this section, we’ll call
any name imported or defined within a if TYPE_CHECKING:
block
a forward reference, too.
This PEP addresses the issue of forward references in type annotations.
The use of string literals will no longer be required in this case.
However, there are APIs in the typing
module that use other syntactic
constructs of the language, and those will still require working around
forward references with string literals. The list includes:
- type definitions:
T = TypeVar('T', bound='<type>') UserId = NewType('UserId', '<type>') Employee = NamedTuple('Employee', [('name', '<type>'), ('id', '<type>')])
- aliases:
Alias = Optional['<type>'] AnotherAlias = Union['<type>', '<type>'] YetAnotherAlias = '<type>'
- casting:
cast('<type>', value)
- base classes:
class C(Tuple['<type>', '<type>']): ...
Depending on the specific case, some of the cases listed above might be
worked around by placing the usage in a if TYPE_CHECKING:
block.
This will not work for any code that needs to be available at runtime,
notably for base classes and casting. For named tuples, using the new
class definition syntax introduced in Python 3.6 solves the issue.
In general, fixing the issue for all forward references requires changing how module instantiation is performed in Python, from the current single-pass top-down model. This would be a major change in the language and is out of scope for this PEP.
Rejected Ideas
Keeping the ability to use function local state when defining annotations
With postponed evaluation, this would require keeping a reference to the frame in which an annotation got created. This could be achieved for example by storing all annotations as lambdas instead of strings.
This would be prohibitively expensive for highly annotated code as the frames would keep all their objects alive. That includes predominantly objects that won’t ever be accessed again.
To be able to address class-level scope, the lambda approach would
require a new kind of cell in the interpreter. This would proliferate
the number of types that can appear in __annotations__
, as well as
wouldn’t be as introspectable as strings.
Note that in the case of nested classes, the functionality to get the
effective “globals” and “locals” at definition time is provided by
typing.get_type_hints()
.
If a function generates a class or a function with annotations that
have to use local variables, it can populate the given generated
object’s __annotations__
dictionary directly, without relying on
the compiler.
Disallowing local state usage for classes, too
This PEP originally proposed limiting names within annotations to only allow names from the model-level scope, including for classes. The author argued this makes name resolution unambiguous, including in cases of conflicts between local names and module-level names.
This idea was ultimately rejected in case of classes. Instead,
typing.get_type_hints()
got modified to populate the local namespace
correctly if class-level annotations are needed.
The reasons for rejecting the idea were that it goes against the intuition of how scoping works in Python, and would break enough existing type annotations to make the transition cumbersome. Finally, local scope access is required for class decorators to be able to evaluate type annotations. This is because class decorators are applied before the class receives its name in the outer scope.
Introducing a new dictionary for the string literal form instead
Yury Selivanov shared the following idea:
- Add a new special attribute to functions:
__annotations_text__
. - Make
__annotations__
a lazy dynamic mapping, evaluating expressions from the corresponding key in__annotations_text__
just-in-time.
This idea is supposed to solve the backwards compatibility issue,
removing the need for a new __future__
import. Sadly, this is not
enough. Postponed evaluation changes which state the annotation has
access to. While postponed evaluation fixes the forward reference
problem, it also makes it impossible to access function-level locals
anymore. This alone is a source of backwards incompatibility which
justifies a deprecation period.
A __future__
import is an obvious and explicit indicator of opting
in for the new functionality. It also makes it trivial for external
tools to recognize the difference between a Python files using the old
or the new approach. In the former case, that tool would recognize that
local state access is allowed, whereas in the latter case it would
recognize that forward references are allowed.
Finally, just-in-time evaluation in __annotations__
is an
unnecessary step if get_type_hints()
is used later.
Dropping annotations with -O
There are two reasons this is not satisfying for the purpose of this PEP.
First, this only addresses runtime cost, not forward references, those still cannot be safely used in source code. A library maintainer would never be able to use forward references since that would force the library users to use this new hypothetical -O switch.
Second, this throws the baby out with the bath water. Now no runtime annotation use can be performed. PEP 557 is one example of a recent development where evaluating type annotations at runtime is useful.
All that being said, a granular -O option to drop annotations is a possibility in the future, as it’s conceptually compatible with existing -O behavior (dropping docstrings and assert statements). This PEP does not invalidate the idea.
Passing string literals in annotations verbatim to __annotations__
This PEP originally suggested directly storing the contents of a string
literal under its respective key in __annotations__
. This was
meant to simplify support for runtime type checkers.
Mark Shannon pointed out this idea was flawed since it wasn’t handling situations where strings are only part of a type annotation.
The inconsistency of it was always apparent but given that it doesn’t fully prevent cases of double-wrapping strings anyway, it is not worth it.
Making the name of the future import more verbose
Instead of requiring the following import:
from __future__ import annotations
the PEP could call the feature more explicitly, for example
string_annotations
, stringify_annotations
,
annotation_strings
, annotations_as_strings
, lazy_annotations
,
static_annotations
, etc.
The problem with those names is that they are very verbose. Each of
them besides lazy_annotations
would constitute the longest future
feature name in Python. They are long to type and harder to remember
than the single-word form.
There is precedence of a future import name that sounds overly generic but in practice was obvious to users as to what it does:
from __future__ import division
Prior discussion
In PEP 484
The forward reference problem was discussed when PEP 484 was originally drafted, leading to the following statement in the document:
A compromise is possible where a__future__
import could enable turning all annotations in a given module into string literals, as follows:from __future__ import annotations class ImSet: def add(self, a: ImSet) -> List[ImSet]: ... assert ImSet.add.__annotations__ == { 'a': 'ImSet', 'return': 'List[ImSet]' }Such a
__future__
import statement may be proposed in a separate PEP.
python/typing#400
The problem was discussed at length on the typing module’s GitHub
project, under Issue 400.
The problem statement there includes critique of generic types requiring
imports from typing
. This tends to be confusing to
beginners:
Why this:from typing import List, Set def dir(o: object = ...) -> List[str]: ... def add_friends(friends: Set[Friend]) -> None: ...But not this:
def dir(o: object = ...) -> list[str]: ... def add_friends(friends: set[Friend]) -> None ...Why this:
up_to_ten = list(range(10)) friends = set()But not this:
from typing import List, Set up_to_ten = List[int](range(10)) friends = Set[Friend]()
While typing usability is an interesting problem, it is out of scope of this PEP. Specifically, any extensions of the typing syntax standardized in PEP 484 will require their own respective PEPs and approval.
Issue 400 ultimately suggests postponing evaluation of annotations and
keeping them as strings in __annotations__
, just like this PEP
specifies. This idea was received well. Ivan Levkivskyi supported
using the __future__
import and suggested unparsing the AST in
compile.c
. Jukka Lehtosalo pointed out that there are some cases
of forward references where types are used outside of annotations and
postponed evaluation will not help those. For those cases using the
string literal notation would still be required. Those cases are
discussed briefly in the “Forward References” section of this PEP.
The biggest controversy on the issue was Guido van Rossum’s concern that untokenizing annotation expressions back to their string form has no precedent in the Python programming language and feels like a hacky workaround. He said:
One thing that comes to mind is that it’s a very random change to the language. It might be useful to have a more compact way to indicate deferred execution of expressions (using less syntax thanlambda:
). But why would the use case of type annotations be so all-important to change the language to do it there first (rather than proposing a more general solution), given that there’s already a solution for this particular use case that requires very minimal syntax?
Eventually, Ethan Smith and schollii voiced that feedback gathered
during PyCon US suggests that the state of forward references needs
fixing. Guido van Rossum suggested coming back to the __future__
idea, pointing out that to prevent abuse, it’s important for the
annotations to be kept both syntactically valid and evaluating correctly
at runtime.
First draft discussion on python-ideas
Discussion happened largely in two threads, the original announcement and a follow-up called PEP 563 and expensive backwards compatibility.
The PEP received rather warm feedback (4 strongly in favor, 2 in favor with concerns, 2 against). The biggest voice of concern on the former thread being Steven D’Aprano’s review stating that the problem definition of the PEP doesn’t justify breaking backwards compatibility. In this response Steven seemed mostly concerned about Python no longer supporting evaluation of annotations that depended on local function/class state.
A few people voiced concerns that there are libraries using annotations
for non-typing purposes. However, none of the named libraries would be
invalidated by this PEP. They do require adapting to the new
requirement to call eval()
on the annotation with the correct
globals
and locals
set.
This detail about globals
and locals
having to be correct was
picked up by a number of commenters. Nick Coghlan benchmarked turning
annotations into lambdas instead of strings, sadly this proved to be
much slower at runtime than the current situation.
The latter thread was started by Jim J. Jewett who stressed that the ability to properly evaluate annotations is an important requirement and backwards compatibility in that regard is valuable. After some discussion he admitted that side effects in annotations are a code smell and modal support to either perform or not perform evaluation is a messy solution. His biggest concern remained loss of functionality stemming from the evaluation restrictions on global and local scope.
Nick Coghlan pointed out that some of those evaluation restrictions from the PEP could be lifted by a clever implementation of an evaluation helper, which could solve self-referencing classes even in the form of a class decorator. He suggested the PEP should provide this helper function in the standard library.
Second draft discussion on python-dev
Discussion happened mainly in the announcement thread, followed by a brief discussion under Mark Shannon’s post.
Steven D’Aprano was concerned whether it’s acceptable for typos to be allowed in annotations after the change proposed by the PEP. Brett Cannon responded that type checkers and other static analyzers (like linters or programming text editors) will catch this type of error. Jukka Lehtosalo added that this situation is analogous to how names in function bodies are not resolved until the function is called.
A major topic of discussion was Nick Coghlan’s suggestion to store annotations in “thunk form”, in other words as a specialized lambda which would be able to access class-level scope (and allow for scope customization at call time). He presented a possible design for it (indirect attribute cells). This was later seen as equivalent to “special forms” in Lisp. Guido van Rossum expressed worry that this sort of feature cannot be safely implemented in twelve weeks (i.e. in time before the Python 3.7 beta freeze).
After a while it became clear that the point of division between supporters of the string form vs. supporters of the thunk form is actually about whether annotations should be perceived as a general syntactic element vs. something tied to the type checking use case.
Finally, Guido van Rossum declared he’s rejecting the thunk idea
based on the fact that it would require a new building block in the
interpreter. This block would be exposed in annotations, multiplying
possible types of values stored in __annotations__
(arbitrary
objects, strings, and now thunks). Moreover, thunks aren’t as
introspectable as strings. Most importantly, Guido van Rossum
explicitly stated interest in gradually restricting the use of
annotations to static typing (with an optional runtime component).
Nick Coghlan got convinced to PEP 563, too, promptly beginning
the mandatory bike shedding session on the name of the __future__
import. Many debaters agreed that annotations
seems like
an overly broad name for the feature name. Guido van Rossum briefly
decided to call it string_annotations
but then changed his mind,
arguing that division
is a precedent of a broad name with a clear
meaning.
The final improvement to the PEP suggested in the discussion by Mark
Shannon was the rejection of the temptation to pass string literals
through to __annotations__
verbatim.
A side-thread of discussion started around the runtime penalty of
static typing, with topic like the import time of the typing
module (which is comparable to re
without dependencies, and
three times as heavy as re
when counting dependencies).
Acknowledgements
This document could not be completed without valuable input, encouragement and advice from Guido van Rossum, Jukka Lehtosalo, and Ivan Levkivskyi.
The implementation was thoroughly reviewed by Serhiy Storchaka who found all sorts of issues, including bugs, bad readability, and performance problems.
Copyright
This document has been placed in the public domain.
Source: https://github.com/python/peps/blob/main/pep-0563.rst
Last modified: 2022-10-07 00:36:39 GMT