It was created in early 2017 when Mypy performance was often insufficient for in-editor linting. The Flake8 plugin traded correctness for performance, making Mypy only check a bare minimum of problems. These days Mypy is accelerated with mypyc, as well as uses aggressive caching to speed up incremental checks. It's no longer worth it to use hacks such as flake8-mypy.
A plugin for Flake8 integrating mypy. The idea is to enable limited type checking as a linter inside editors and other tools that already support Flake8 warning syntax and config.
flake8-mypy reserves T4 for all current and future codes, T being
the natural letter for typing-related errors. There are other plugins
greedily reserving the entire letter T. To this I say: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
.
T400: any typing note.
T484: any typing error (after PEP 484, geddit?).
T498: internal mypy error.
T499: internal mypy traceback, stderr output, or an unmatched line.
I plan to support more fine-grained error codes for specific mypy errors in the future.
mypy shines when given a full program to analyze. You can then use
options like --follow-imports
or --disallow-untyped-calls
to
exercise the full transitive closure of your modules, catching errors
stemming from bad API usage or incompatible types. That being said,
those checks take time, and require access to the entire codebase. For
some tools, like an editor with an open file, or a code review tool,
achieving this is not trivial. This is where a more limited approach
inside a linter comes in.
Flake8 operates on unrelated files, it doesn't perform full program analysis. In other words, it doesn't follow imports. This is a curse and a blessing. We cannot find complex problems and the number of warnings we can safely show without risking false positives is lower. In return, we can provide useful warnings with great performance, usable for realtime editor integration.
As it turns out, in this mode of operation, mypy is still able to provide useful information on the annotations within and at least usage of stubbed standard library and third party libraries. However, for best effects, you will want to use separate configuration for mypy's standalone mode and for usage as a Flake8 plugin.
Due to the reasoning above, by default flake8-mypy will operate with options equivalent to the following:
[mypy]
# Specify the target platform details in config, so your developers are
# free to run mypy on Windows, Linux, or macOS and get consistent
# results.
python_version=3.6
platform=linux
# flake8-mypy expects the two following for sensible formatting
show_column_numbers=True
show_error_context=False
# do not follow imports (except for ones found in typeshed)
follow_imports=skip
# since we're ignoring imports, writing .mypy_cache doesn't make any sense
cache_dir=/dev/null
# suppress errors about unsatisfied imports
ignore_missing_imports=True
# allow untyped calls as a consequence of the options above
disallow_untyped_calls=False
# allow returning Any as a consequence of the options above
warn_return_any=False
# treat Optional per PEP 484
strict_optional=True
# ensure all execution paths are returning
warn_no_return=True
# lint-style cleanliness for typing needs to be disabled; returns more errors
# than the full run.
warn_redundant_casts=False
warn_unused_ignores=False
# The following are off by default since they're too noisy.
# Flip them on if you feel adventurous.
disallow_untyped_defs=False
check_untyped_defs=False
If you disagree with the defaults above, you can specify your own mypy
configuration by providing the --mypy-config=
command-line option to
Flake8 (with the .flake8/setup.cfg equivalent being called
mypy_config
). The value of that option should be a path to a mypy.ini
or setup.cfg compatible file. For full configuration syntax, follow
mypy documentation.
For the sake of simplicity and readability, the config you provide will fully replace the one listed above. Values left out will be using mypy's own defaults.
Remember that for the best user experience, your linter integration mode shouldn't generally display errors that a full run of mypy wouldn't. This would be confusing.
Note: chaing the follow_imports
option might have surprising effects.
If the file you're linting with Flake8 has other files around it, then in
"silent" or "normal" mode those files will be used to follow imports.
This includes imports from typeshed.
Just run:
python setup.py test
Yes, so is mypy. Relax, you can run Flake8 with all popular plugins as a tool perfectly fine under Python 3.5+ even if you want to analyze Python 2 code. This way you'll be able to parse all of the new syntax supported on Python 3 but also effectively all the Python 2 syntax at the same time.
By making the code exclusively Python 3.5+, I'm able to focus on the quality of the checks and re-use all the nice features of the new releases (check out pathlib) instead of wasting cycles on Unicode compatibility, etc.
MIT
-
avoid raising errors in the default config which don't happen during a full run (disable warn_unused_ignores and warn_redundant_casts)
-
always run type checks from a temporary directory to avoid clashing with unrelated files in the same directory
- suppress mypy messages about relative imports
-
bugfix: using Flake8 with absolute paths now correctly matches mypy messages
-
bugfix: don't crash on relative imports in the form
from . import X
-
switch
follow_imports
from "silent" to "skip" to avoid name clashing files being used to follow imports within typeshed -
set MYPYPATH by default to give stubs from typeshed higher priority than local sources
-
performance optimization: skip running mypy over files that contain no annotations or imports from
typing
-
bugfix: when running over an entire directory, T484 is now correctly used instead of T499
-
first published version
-
date-versioned
Glued together by Łukasz Langa.