Skip to content

Conversation

@JordonPhillips
Copy link
Contributor

Pyright's strict mode is becoming increasingly strict with regards to generics. You used to be able to effectively narrow them by declaring the type like so:

string_list: list[str] = list()

But that's no longer accepted. Now the actual value must itself resolve to something that has resolved parameterization. This unfortunately means that actual casting is sometimes necessary. It's not a huge hit because it's a do-nothing function, but it's still a function call that I'd rather not be doing.

By submitting this pull request, I confirm that you can use, modify, copy, and redistribute this contribution, under the terms of your choice.

@JordonPhillips JordonPhillips marked this pull request as ready for review May 2, 2025 14:21
@JordonPhillips JordonPhillips requested a review from a team as a code owner May 2, 2025 14:21
Pyright's strict mode is becoming increasingly strict with regards
to generics. You used to be able to effectively narrow them by
declaring the type like so:

string_list: list[str] = list()

But that's no longer accepted. Now the actual value must itself
resolve to something that has resolved parameterization. This
unfortunately means that actual casting is sometimes necessary.
It's not a huge hit because it's a do-nothing function, but it's
still a function call that I'd rather not be doing.
Copy link
Contributor

@jonathan343 jonathan343 left a comment

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

LGTM!

@JordonPhillips JordonPhillips merged commit 6a85f06 into develop May 2, 2025
2 checks passed
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment

Labels

None yet

Projects

None yet

Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

2 participants