| <!-- |
| AUTHORS: |
| Prefer only GitHub-flavored Markdown in external text. |
| See README.md for details. |
| --> |
| |
| # Google Python Style Guide |
| |
| |
| <a id="1-background"></a> |
| |
| <a id="background"></a> |
| ## 1 Background |
| |
| Python is the main dynamic language used at Google. This style guide is a list |
| of *dos and don'ts* for Python programs. |
| |
| To help you format code correctly, we've created a [settings file for |
| Vim](google_python_style.vim). For Emacs, the default settings should be fine. |
| |
| Many teams use the [yapf](https://github.com/google/yapf/) |
| auto-formatter to avoid arguing over formatting. |
| |
| |
| <a id="s2-python-language-rules"></a> |
| <a id="2-python-language-rules"></a> |
| |
| <a id="python-language-rules"></a> |
| ## 2 Python Language Rules |
| |
| <a id="s2.1-lint"></a> |
| <a id="21-lint"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lint"></a> |
| ### 2.1 Lint |
| |
| Run `pylint` over your code. |
| |
| <a id="s2.1.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="211-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lint-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.1.1 Definition |
| |
| `pylint` is a tool for finding bugs and style problems in Python source |
| code. It finds problems that are typically caught by a compiler for less dynamic |
| languages like C and C++. Because of the dynamic nature of Python, some |
| warnings may be incorrect; however, spurious warnings should be fairly |
| infrequent. |
| |
| <a id="s2.1.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="212-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lint-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.1.2 Pros |
| |
| Catches easy-to-miss errors like typos, using-vars-before-assignment, etc. |
| |
| <a id="s2.1.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="213-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lint-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.1.3 Cons |
| |
| `pylint` isn't perfect. To take advantage of it, we'll need to sometimes: a) |
| Write around it b) Suppress its warnings or c) Improve it. |
| |
| <a id="s2.1.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="214-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lint-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.1.4 Decision |
| |
| Make sure you run `pylint` on your code. |
| |
| |
| Suppress warnings if they are inappropriate so that other issues are not hidden. |
| To suppress warnings, you can set a line-level comment: |
| |
| ```python |
| dict = 'something awful' # Bad Idea... pylint: disable=redefined-builtin |
| ``` |
| |
| `pylint` warnings are each identified by symbolic name (`empty-docstring`) |
| Google-specific warnings start with `g-`. |
| |
| If the reason for the suppression is not clear from the symbolic name, add an |
| explanation. |
| |
| Suppressing in this way has the advantage that we can easily search for |
| suppressions and revisit them. |
| |
| You can get a list of `pylint` warnings by doing: |
| |
| ```shell |
| pylint --list-msgs |
| ``` |
| |
| To get more information on a particular message, use: |
| |
| ```shell |
| pylint --help-msg=C6409 |
| ``` |
| |
| Prefer `pylint: disable` to the deprecated older form `pylint: disable-msg`. |
| |
| Unused argument warnings can be suppressed by deleting the variables at the |
| beginning of the function. Always include a comment explaining why you are |
| deleting it. "Unused." is sufficient. For example: |
| |
| ```python |
| def viking_cafe_order(spam, beans, eggs=None): |
| del beans, eggs # Unused by vikings. |
| return spam + spam + spam |
| ``` |
| |
| Other common forms of suppressing this warning include using '`_`' as the |
| identifier for the unused argument, prefixing the argument name with |
| '`unused_`', or assigning them to '`_`'. These forms are allowed but no longer |
| encouraged. The first two break callers that pass arguments by name, while the |
| last does not enforce that the arguments are actually unused. |
| |
| <a id="s2.2-imports"></a> |
| <a id="22-imports"></a> |
| |
| <a id="imports"></a> |
| ### 2.2 Imports |
| |
| Use `import` statements for packages and modules only, not for individual |
| classes or functions. Note that there is an explicit exemption for imports from |
| the [typing module](#typing-imports). |
| |
| <a id="s2.2.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="221-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="imports-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.2.1 Definition |
| |
| Reusability mechanism for sharing code from one module to another. |
| |
| <a id="s2.2.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="222-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="imports-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.2.2 Pros |
| |
| The namespace management convention is simple. The source of each identifier is |
| indicated in a consistent way; `x.Obj` says that object `Obj` is defined in |
| module `x`. |
| |
| <a id="s2.2.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="223-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="imports-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.2.3 Cons |
| |
| Module names can still collide. Some module names are inconveniently long. |
| |
| <a id="s2.2.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="224-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="imports-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.2.4 Decision |
| |
| * Use `import x` for importing packages and modules. |
| * Use `from x import y` where `x` is the package prefix and `y` is the module |
| name with no prefix. |
| * Use `from x import y as z` if two modules named `y` are to be imported or if |
| `y` is an inconveniently long name. |
| * Use `import y as z` only when `z` is a standard abbreviation (e.g., `np` for |
| `numpy`). |
| |
| For example the module `sound.effects.echo` may be imported as follows: |
| |
| ```python |
| from sound.effects import echo |
| ... |
| echo.EchoFilter(input, output, delay=0.7, atten=4) |
| ``` |
| |
| 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. |
| |
| Imports from the [typing module](#typing-imports) and the |
| [six.moves module](https://six.readthedocs.io/#module-six.moves) |
| are exempt from this rule. |
| |
| <a id="s2.3-packages"></a> |
| <a id="23-packages"></a> |
| |
| <a id="packages"></a> |
| ### 2.3 Packages |
| |
| Import each module using the full pathname location of the module. |
| |
| <a id="s2.3.1-pros"></a> |
| <a id="231-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="packages-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.3.1 Pros |
| |
| Avoids conflicts in module names or incorrect imports due to the module search |
| path not being what the author expected. Makes it easier to find modules. |
| |
| <a id="s2.3.2-cons"></a> |
| <a id="232-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="packages-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.3.2 Cons |
| |
| Makes it harder to deploy code because you have to replicate the package |
| hierarchy. Not really a problem with modern deployment mechanisms. |
| |
| <a id="s2.3.3-decision"></a> |
| <a id="233-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="packages-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.3.3 Decision |
| |
| All new code should import each module by its full package name. |
| |
| Imports should be as follows: |
| |
| Yes: |
| |
| ```python |
| # Reference absl.flags in code with the complete name (verbose). |
| import absl.flags |
| from doctor.who import jodie |
| |
| FLAGS = absl.flags.FLAGS |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| # Reference flags in code with just the module name (common). |
| from absl import flags |
| from doctor.who import jodie |
| |
| FLAGS = flags.FLAGS |
| ``` |
| |
| No: _(assume this file lives in `doctor/who/` where `jodie.py` also exists)_ |
| |
| ```python |
| # Unclear what module the author wanted and what will be imported. The actual |
| # import behavior depends on external factors controlling sys.path. |
| # Which possible jodie module did the author intend to import? |
| import jodie |
| ``` |
| |
| The directory the main binary is located in should not be assumed to be in |
| `sys.path` despite that happening in some environments. This being the case, |
| code should assume that `import jodie` refers to a third party or top level |
| package named `jodie`, not a local `jodie.py`. |
| |
| |
| <a id="s2.4-exceptions"></a> |
| <a id="24-exceptions"></a> |
| |
| <a id="exceptions"></a> |
| ### 2.4 Exceptions |
| |
| Exceptions are allowed but must be used carefully. |
| |
| <a id="s2.4.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="241-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="exceptions-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.4.1 Definition |
| |
| Exceptions are a means of breaking out of the normal flow of control of a code |
| block to handle errors or other exceptional conditions. |
| |
| <a id="s2.4.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="242-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="exceptions-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.4.2 Pros |
| |
| The control flow of normal operation code is not cluttered by error-handling |
| code. It also allows the control flow to skip multiple frames when a certain |
| condition occurs, e.g., returning from N nested functions in one step instead of |
| having to carry-through error codes. |
| |
| <a id="s2.4.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="243-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="exceptions-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.4.3 Cons |
| |
| May cause the control flow to be confusing. Easy to miss error cases when making |
| library calls. |
| |
| <a id="s2.4.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="244-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="exceptions-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.4.4 Decision |
| |
| Exceptions must follow certain conditions: |
| |
| - Raise exceptions like this: `raise MyError('Error message')` or `raise |
| MyError()`. Do not use the two-argument form (`raise MyError, 'Error |
| message'`). |
| |
| - Make use of built-in exception classes when it makes sense. For example, |
| raise a `ValueError` to indicate a programming mistake like a violated |
| precondition (such as if you were passed a negative number but required a |
| positive one). Do not use `assert` statements for validating argument values |
| of a public API. `assert` is used to ensure internal correctness, not to |
| enforce correct usage nor to indicate that some unexpected event occurred. |
| If an exception is desired in the latter cases, use a raise statement. For |
| example: |
| |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| def connect_to_next_port(self, minimum): |
| """Connects to the next available port. |
| |
| Args: |
| minimum: A port value greater or equal to 1024. |
| |
| Returns: |
| The new minimum port. |
| |
| Raises: |
| ConnectionError: If no available port is found. |
| """ |
| if minimum < 1024: |
| # Note that this raising of ValueError is not mentioned in the doc |
| # string's "Raises:" section because it is not appropriate to |
| # guarantee this specific behavioral reaction to API misuse. |
| raise ValueError('Minimum port must be at least 1024, not %d.' % (minimum,)) |
| port = self._find_next_open_port(minimum) |
| if not port: |
| raise ConnectionError('Could not connect to service on %d or higher.' % (minimum,)) |
| assert port >= minimum, 'Unexpected port %d when minimum was %d.' % (port, minimum) |
| return port |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: |
| def connect_to_next_port(self, minimum): |
| """Connects to the next available port. |
| |
| Args: |
| minimum: A port value greater or equal to 1024. |
| |
| Returns: |
| The new minimum port. |
| """ |
| assert minimum >= 1024, 'Minimum port must be at least 1024.' |
| port = self._find_next_open_port(minimum) |
| assert port is not None |
| return port |
| ``` |
| |
| - Libraries or packages may define their own exceptions. When doing so they |
| must inherit from an existing exception class. Exception names should end in |
| `Error` and should not introduce stutter (`foo.FooError`). |
| |
| - Never use catch-all `except:` statements, or catch `Exception` or |
| `StandardError`, unless you are |
| |
| - re-raising the exception, or |
| - creating an isolation point in the program where exceptions are not |
| propagated but are recorded and suppressed instead, such as protecting a |
| thread from crashing by guarding its outermost block. |
| |
| Python is very tolerant in this regard and `except:` will really catch |
| everything including misspelled names, sys.exit() calls, Ctrl+C interrupts, |
| unittest failures and all kinds of other exceptions that you simply don't |
| want to catch. |
| |
| - Minimize the amount of code in a `try`/`except` block. The larger the body |
| of the `try`, the more likely that an exception will be raised by a line of |
| code that you didn't expect to raise an exception. In those cases, the |
| `try`/`except` block hides a real error. |
| |
| - Use the `finally` clause to execute code whether or not an exception is |
| raised in the `try` block. This is often useful for cleanup, i.e., closing a |
| file. |
| |
| - When capturing an exception, use `as` rather than a comma. For example: |
| |
| |
| ```python |
| try: |
| raise Error() |
| except Error as error: |
| pass |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s2.5-global-variables"></a> |
| <a id="25-global-variables"></a> |
| |
| <a id="global-variables"></a> |
| ### 2.5 Global variables |
| |
| Avoid global variables. |
| |
| <a id="s2.5.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="251-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="global-variables-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.5.1 Definition |
| |
| Variables that are declared at the module level or as class attributes. |
| |
| <a id="s2.5.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="252-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="global-variables-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.5.2 Pros |
| |
| Occasionally useful. |
| |
| <a id="s2.5.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="253-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="global-variables-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.5.3 Cons |
| |
| Has the potential to change module behavior during the import, because |
| assignments to global variables are done when the module is first imported. |
| |
| <a id="s2.5.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="254-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="global-variables-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.5.4 Decision |
| |
| Avoid global variables. |
| |
| While they are technically variables, module-level constants are permitted and |
| encouraged. For example: `MAX_HOLY_HANDGRENADE_COUNT = 3`. Constants must be |
| named using all caps with underscores. See [Naming](#s3.16-naming) below. |
| |
| If needed, globals should be declared at the module level and made internal to |
| the module by prepending an `_` to the name. External access must be done |
| through public module-level functions. See [Naming](#s3.16-naming) below. |
| |
| <a id="s2.6-nested"></a> |
| <a id="26-nested"></a> |
| |
| <a id="nested-classes-functions"></a> |
| ### 2.6 Nested/Local/Inner Classes and Functions |
| |
| Nested local functions or classes are fine when used to close over a local |
| variable. Inner classes are fine. |
| |
| <a id="s2.6.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="261-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="nested-classes-functions-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.6.1 Definition |
| |
| A class can be defined inside of a method, function, or class. A function can be |
| defined inside a method or function. Nested functions have read-only access to |
| variables defined in enclosing scopes. |
| |
| <a id="s2.6.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="262-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="nested-classes-functions-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.6.2 Pros |
| |
| Allows definition of utility classes and functions that are only used inside of |
| a very limited scope. Very |
| [ADT](http://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_data_type)-y. |
| Commonly used for implementing decorators. |
| |
| <a id="s2.6.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="263-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="nested-classes-functions-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.6.3 Cons |
| |
| Instances of nested or local classes cannot be pickled. Nested functions and |
| classes cannot be directly tested. Nesting can make your outer function longer |
| and less readable. |
| |
| <a id="s2.6.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="264-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="nested-classes-functions-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.6.4 Decision |
| |
| They are fine with some caveats. Avoid nested functions or classes except when |
| closing over a local value. Do not nest a function just to hide it from users |
| of a module. Instead, prefix its name with an \_ at the module level so that it |
| can still be accessed by tests. |
| |
| <a id="s2.7-list_comprehensions"></a> |
| <a id="27-list_comprehensions"></a> |
| <a id="list_comprehensions"></a> |
| <a id="list-comprehensions"></a> |
| |
| <a id="comprehensions"></a> |
| ### 2.7 Comprehensions & Generator Expressions |
| |
| Okay to use for simple cases. |
| |
| <a id="s2.7.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="271-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="comprehensions-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.7.1 Definition |
| |
| List, Dict, and Set comprehensions as well as generator expressions provide a |
| concise and efficient way to create container types and iterators without |
| resorting to the use of traditional loops, `map()`, `filter()`, or `lambda`. |
| |
| <a id="s2.7.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="272-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="comprehensions-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.7.2 Pros |
| |
| Simple comprehensions can be clearer and simpler than other dict, list, or set |
| creation techniques. Generator expressions can be very efficient, since they |
| avoid the creation of a list entirely. |
| |
| <a id="s2.7.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="273-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="comprehensions-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.7.3 Cons |
| |
| Complicated comprehensions or generator expressions can be hard to read. |
| |
| <a id="s2.7.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="274-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="comprehensions-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.7.4 Decision |
| |
| Okay to use for simple cases. Each portion must fit on one line: mapping |
| expression, `for` clause, filter expression. Multiple `for` clauses or filter |
| expressions are not permitted. Use loops instead when things get more |
| complicated. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| result = [mapping_expr for value in iterable if filter_expr] |
| |
| result = [{'key': value} for value in iterable |
| if a_long_filter_expression(value)] |
| |
| result = [complicated_transform(x) |
| for x in iterable if predicate(x)] |
| |
| descriptive_name = [ |
| transform({'key': key, 'value': value}, color='black') |
| for key, value in generate_iterable(some_input) |
| if complicated_condition_is_met(key, value) |
| ] |
| |
| result = [] |
| for x in range(10): |
| for y in range(5): |
| if x * y > 10: |
| result.append((x, y)) |
| |
| return {x: complicated_transform(x) |
| for x in long_generator_function(parameter) |
| if x is not None} |
| |
| squares_generator = (x**2 for x in range(10)) |
| |
| unique_names = {user.name for user in users if user is not None} |
| |
| eat(jelly_bean for jelly_bean in jelly_beans |
| if jelly_bean.color == 'black') |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: |
| result = [complicated_transform( |
| x, some_argument=x+1) |
| for x in iterable if predicate(x)] |
| |
| result = [(x, y) for x in range(10) for y in range(5) if x * y > 10] |
| |
| return ((x, y, z) |
| for x in xrange(5) |
| for y in xrange(5) |
| if x != y |
| for z in xrange(5) |
| if y != z) |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s2.8-default-iterators-and-operators"></a> |
| |
| <a id="default-iterators-operators"></a> |
| ### 2.8 Default Iterators and Operators |
| |
| Use default iterators and operators for types that support them, like lists, |
| dictionaries, and files. |
| |
| <a id="s2.8.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="281-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="default-iterators-operators-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.8.1 Definition |
| |
| Container types, like dictionaries and lists, define default iterators and |
| membership test operators ("in" and "not in"). |
| |
| <a id="s2.8.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="282-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="default-iterators-operators-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.8.2 Pros |
| |
| The default iterators and operators are simple and efficient. They express the |
| operation directly, without extra method calls. A function that uses default |
| operators is generic. It can be used with any type that supports the operation. |
| |
| <a id="s2.8.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="283-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="default-iterators-operators-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.8.3 Cons |
| |
| You can't tell the type of objects by reading the method names (e.g. has\_key() |
| means a dictionary). This is also an advantage. |
| |
| <a id="s2.8.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="284-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="default-iterators-operators-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.8.4 Decision |
| |
| Use default iterators and operators for types that support them, like lists, |
| dictionaries, and files. The built-in types define iterator methods, too. Prefer |
| these methods to methods that return lists, except that you should not mutate a |
| container while iterating over it. Never use Python 2 specific iteration |
| methods such as `dict.iter*()` unless necessary. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: for key in adict: ... |
| if key not 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> |
| <a id="29-generators"></a> |
| |
| <a id="generators"></a> |
| ### 2.9 Generators |
| |
| Use generators as needed. |
| |
| <a id="s2.9.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="291-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="generators-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.9 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 |
| generator function is suspended until the next value is needed. |
| |
| <a id="s2.9.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="292-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="generators-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.9.2 Pros |
| |
| Simpler code, because the state of local variables and control flow are |
| preserved for each call. A generator uses less memory than a function that |
| creates an entire list of values at once. |
| |
| <a id="s2.9.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="293-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="generators-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.9.3 Cons |
| |
| None. |
| |
| <a id="s2.9.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="294-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="generators-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.9.4 Decision |
| |
| Fine. Use "Yields:" rather than "Returns:" in the docstring for generator |
| functions. |
| |
| <a id="s2.10-lambda-functions"></a> |
| <a id="210-lambda-functions"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lambdas"></a> |
| ### 2.10 Lambda Functions |
| |
| Okay for one-liners. |
| |
| <a id="s2.10.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="2101-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lambdas-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.10.1 Definition |
| |
| Lambdas define anonymous functions in an expression, as opposed to a statement. |
| They are often used to define callbacks or operators for higher-order functions |
| like `map()` and `filter()`. |
| |
| <a id="s2.10.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="2102-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lambdas-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.10.2 Pros |
| |
| Convenient. |
| |
| <a id="s2.10.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="2103-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lambdas-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.10.3 Cons |
| |
| Harder to read and debug than local functions. The lack of names means stack |
| traces are more difficult to understand. Expressiveness is limited because the |
| function may only contain an expression. |
| |
| <a id="s2.10.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="2104-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lambdas-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.10.4 Decision |
| |
| Okay to use them for one-liners. If the code inside the lambda function is |
| longer than 60-80 chars, it's probably better to define it as a regular [nested |
| function](#lexical-scoping). |
| |
| For common operations like multiplication, use the functions from the `operator` |
| module instead of lambda functions. For example, prefer `operator.mul` to |
| `lambda x, y: x * y`. |
| |
| <a id="s2.11-conditional-expressions"></a> |
| <a id="211-conditional-expressions"></a> |
| |
| <a id="conditional-expressions"></a> |
| ### 2.11 Conditional Expressions |
| |
| Okay for simple cases. |
| |
| <a id="s2.11.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="2111-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="conditional-expressions-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.11.1 Definition |
| |
| Conditional expressions (sometimes called a “ternary operator”) are mechanisms |
| that provide a shorter syntax for if statements. For example: |
| `x = 1 if cond else 2`. |
| |
| <a id="s2.11.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="2112-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="conditional-expressions-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.11.2 Pros |
| |
| Shorter and more convenient than an if statement. |
| |
| <a id="s2.11.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="2113-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="conditional-expressions-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.11.3 Cons |
| |
| May be harder to read than an if statement. The condition may be difficult to |
| locate if the expression is long. |
| |
| <a id="s2.11.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="2114-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="conditional-expressions-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.11.4 Decision |
| |
| Okay to use for simple cases. Each portion must fit on one line: |
| true-expression, if-expression, else-expression. Use a complete if statement |
| when things get more complicated. |
| |
| ```python |
| one_line = 'yes' if predicate(value) else 'no' |
| slightly_split = ('yes' if predicate(value) |
| else 'no, nein, nyet') |
| the_longest_ternary_style_that_can_be_done = ( |
| 'yes, true, affirmative, confirmed, correct' |
| if predicate(value) |
| else 'no, false, negative, nay') |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| bad_line_breaking = ('yes' if predicate(value) else |
| 'no') |
| portion_too_long = ('yes' |
| if some_long_module.some_long_predicate_function( |
| really_long_variable_name) |
| else 'no, false, negative, nay') |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s2.12-default-argument-values"></a> |
| <a id="212-default-argument-values"></a> |
| |
| <a id="default-arguments"></a> |
| ### 2.12 Default Argument Values |
| |
| Okay in most cases. |
| |
| <a id="s2.12.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="2121-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="default-arguments-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.12.1 Definition |
| |
| You can specify values for variables at the end of a function's parameter list, |
| e.g., `def foo(a, b=0):`. If `foo` is called with only one argument, |
| `b` is set to 0. If it is called with two arguments, `b` has the value of the |
| second argument. |
| |
| <a id="s2.12.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="2122-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="default-arguments-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.12.2 Pros |
| |
| Often you have a function that uses lots of default values, but on rare |
| occasions you want to override the defaults. Default argument values provide an |
| easy way to do this, without having to define lots of functions for the rare |
| exceptions. As Python does not support overloaded methods/functions, default |
| arguments are an easy way of "faking" the overloading behavior. |
| |
| <a id="s2.12.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="2123-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="default-arguments-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.12.3 Cons |
| |
| Default arguments are evaluated once at module load time. This may cause |
| problems if the argument is a mutable object such as a list or a dictionary. If |
| the function modifies the object (e.g., by appending an item to a list), the |
| default value is modified. |
| |
| <a id="s2.12.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="2124-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="default-arguments-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.12.4 Decision |
| |
| Okay to use with the following caveat: |
| |
| Do not use mutable objects as default values in the function or method |
| definition. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: def foo(a, b=None): |
| if b is None: |
| b = [] |
| Yes: def foo(a, b: Optional[Sequence] = None): |
| if b is None: |
| b = [] |
| Yes: def foo(a, b: Sequence = ()): # Empty tuple OK since tuples are immutable |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: def foo(a, b=[]): |
| ... |
| No: def foo(a, b=time.time()): # The time the module was loaded??? |
| ... |
| No: def foo(a, b=FLAGS.my_thing): # sys.argv has not yet been parsed... |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s2.13-properties"></a> |
| <a id="213-properties"></a> |
| |
| <a id="properties"></a> |
| ### 2.13 Properties |
| |
| Use properties for accessing or setting data where you would normally have used |
| simple, lightweight accessor or setter methods. |
| |
| <a id="s2.13.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="2131-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="properties-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.13.1 Definition |
| |
| A way to wrap method calls for getting and setting an attribute as a standard |
| attribute access when the computation is lightweight. |
| |
| <a id="s2.13.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="2132-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="properties-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.13.2 Pros |
| |
| Readability is increased by eliminating explicit get and set method calls for |
| simple attribute access. Allows calculations to be lazy. Considered the Pythonic |
| way to maintain the interface of a class. In terms of performance, allowing |
| properties bypasses needing trivial accessor methods when a direct variable |
| access is reasonable. This also allows accessor methods to be added in the |
| future without breaking the interface. |
| |
| <a id="s2.13.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="2133-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="properties-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.13.3 Cons |
| |
| Must inherit from `object` in Python 2. Can hide side-effects much like operator |
| overloading. Can be confusing for subclasses. |
| |
| <a id="s2.13.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="2134-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="properties-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.13.4 Decision |
| |
| Use properties in new code to access or set data where you would normally have |
| used simple, lightweight accessor or setter methods. Properties should be |
| created with the `@property` [decorator](#s2.17-function-and-method-decorators). |
| |
| Inheritance with properties can be non-obvious if the property itself is not |
| overridden. Thus one must make sure that accessor methods are called indirectly |
| to ensure methods overridden in subclasses are called by the property (using the |
| Template Method DP). |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: import math |
| |
| class Square(object): |
| """A square with two properties: a writable area and a read-only perimeter. |
| |
| To use: |
| >>> sq = Square(3) |
| >>> sq.area |
| 9 |
| >>> sq.perimeter |
| 12 |
| >>> sq.area = 16 |
| >>> sq.side |
| 4 |
| >>> sq.perimeter |
| 16 |
| """ |
| |
| def __init__(self, side): |
| self.side = side |
| |
| @property |
| def area(self): |
| """Area of the square.""" |
| return self._get_area() |
| |
| @area.setter |
| def area(self, area): |
| return self._set_area(area) |
| |
| def _get_area(self): |
| """Indirect accessor to calculate the 'area' property.""" |
| return self.side ** 2 |
| |
| def _set_area(self, area): |
| """Indirect setter to set the 'area' property.""" |
| self.side = math.sqrt(area) |
| |
| @property |
| def perimeter(self): |
| return self.side * 4 |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s2.14-truefalse-evaluations"></a> |
| <a id="214-truefalse-evaluations"></a> |
| |
| <a id="truefalse-evaluations"></a> |
| ### 2.14 True/False Evaluations |
| |
| Use the "implicit" false if at all possible. |
| |
| <a id="s2.14.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="2141-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="truefalse-evaluations-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.14.1 Definition |
| |
| Python evaluates certain values as `False` when in a boolean context. A quick |
| "rule of thumb" is that all "empty" values are considered false, so |
| `0, None, [], {}, ''` all evaluate as false in a boolean context. |
| |
| <a id="s2.14.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="2142-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="truefalse-evaluations-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.14.2 Pros |
| |
| Conditions using Python booleans are easier to read and less error-prone. In |
| most cases, they're also faster. |
| |
| <a id="s2.14.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="2143-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="truefalse-evaluations-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.14.3 Cons |
| |
| May look strange to C/C++ developers. |
| |
| <a id="s2.14.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="2144-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="truefalse-evaluations-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.14.4 Decision |
| |
| Use the "implicit" false if possible, e.g., `if foo:` rather than `if foo != |
| []:`. There are a few caveats that you should keep in mind though: |
| |
| - Always use `if foo is None:` (or `is not None`) to check for a `None` |
| value-e.g., when testing whether a variable or argument that defaults to |
| `None` was set to some other value. The other value might be a value that's |
| false in a boolean context! |
| |
| - Never compare a boolean variable to `False` using `==`. Use `if not x:` |
| instead. If you need to distinguish `False` from `None` then chain the |
| expressions, such as `if not x and x is not None:`. |
| |
| - For sequences (strings, lists, tuples), use the fact that empty sequences |
| are false, so `if seq:` and `if not seq:` are preferable to `if len(seq):` |
| and `if not len(seq):` respectively. |
| |
| - When handling integers, implicit false may involve more risk than benefit |
| (i.e., accidentally handling `None` as 0). You may compare a value which is |
| known to be an integer (and is not the result of `len()`) against the |
| integer 0. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: if not users: |
| print('no users') |
| |
| if foo == 0: |
| self.handle_zero() |
| |
| if i % 10 == 0: |
| self.handle_multiple_of_ten() |
| |
| def f(x=None): |
| if x is None: |
| x = [] |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: if len(users) == 0: |
| print('no users') |
| |
| if foo is not None and not foo: |
| self.handle_zero() |
| |
| if not i % 10: |
| self.handle_multiple_of_ten() |
| |
| def f(x=None): |
| x = x or [] |
| ``` |
| |
| - Note that `'0'` (i.e., `0` as string) evaluates to true. |
| |
| <a id="s2.15-deprecated-language-features"></a> |
| <a id="215-deprecated-language-features"></a> |
| |
| <a id="deprecated-features"></a> |
| ### 2.15 Deprecated Language Features |
| |
| Use string methods instead of the `string` module where possible. Use function |
| call syntax instead of `apply`. Use list comprehensions and `for` loops instead |
| of `filter` and `map` when the function argument would have been an inlined |
| lambda anyway. Use `for` loops instead of `reduce`. |
| |
| <a id="s2.15.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="2151-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="deprecated-features-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.15.1 Definition |
| |
| Current versions of Python provide alternative constructs that people find |
| generally preferable. |
| |
| <a id="s2.15.2-decision"></a> |
| <a id="2152-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="deprecated-features-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.15.2 Decision |
| |
| We do not use any Python version which does not support these features, so there |
| is no reason not to use the new styles. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: words = foo.split(':') |
| |
| [x[1] for x in my_list if x[2] == 5] |
| |
| map(math.sqrt, data) # Ok. No inlined lambda expression. |
| |
| fn(*args, **kwargs) |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: words = string.split(foo, ':') |
| |
| map(lambda x: x[1], filter(lambda x: x[2] == 5, my_list)) |
| |
| apply(fn, args, kwargs) |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s2.16-lexical-scoping"></a> |
| <a id="216-lexical-scoping"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lexical-scoping"></a> |
| ### 2.16 Lexical Scoping |
| |
| Okay to use. |
| |
| <a id="s2.16.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="2161-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lexical-scoping-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.16.1 Definition |
| |
| A nested Python function can refer to variables defined in enclosing functions, |
| but can not assign to them. Variable bindings are resolved using lexical |
| scoping, that is, based on the static program text. Any assignment to a name in |
| a block will cause Python to treat all references to that name as a local |
| variable, even if the use precedes the assignment. If a global declaration |
| occurs, the name is treated as a global variable. |
| |
| An example of the use of this feature is: |
| |
| ```python |
| def get_adder(summand1): |
| """Returns a function that adds numbers to a given number.""" |
| def adder(summand2): |
| return summand1 + summand2 |
| |
| return adder |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s2.16.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="2162-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lexical-scoping-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.16.2 Pros |
| |
| Often results in clearer, more elegant code. Especially comforting to |
| experienced Lisp and Scheme (and Haskell and ML and ...) programmers. |
| |
| <a id="s2.16.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="2163-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lexical-scoping-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.16.3 Cons |
| |
| Can lead to confusing bugs. Such as this example based on |
| [PEP-0227](http://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0227/): |
| |
| ```python |
| i = 4 |
| def foo(x): |
| def bar(): |
| print(i, end='') |
| # ... |
| # A bunch of code here |
| # ... |
| for i in x: # Ah, i *is* local to foo, so this is what bar sees |
| print(i, end='') |
| bar() |
| ``` |
| |
| So `foo([1, 2, 3])` will print `1 2 3 3`, not `1 2 3 |
| 4`. |
| |
| <a id="s2.16.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="2164-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="lexical-scoping-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.16.4 Decision |
| |
| Okay to use. |
| |
| <a id="s2.17-function-and-method-decorators"></a> |
| <a id="217-function-and-method-decorators"></a> |
| <a id="function-and-method-decorators"></a> |
| |
| <a id="decorators"></a> |
| ### 2.17 Function and Method Decorators |
| |
| Use decorators judiciously when there is a clear advantage. Avoid |
| `@staticmethod` and limit use of `@classmethod`. |
| |
| <a id="s2.17.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="2171-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="decorators-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.17.1 Definition |
| |
| [Decorators for Functions and |
| Methods](https://docs.python.org/3/glossary.html#term-decorator) |
| (a.k.a "the `@` notation"). One common decorator is `@property`, used for |
| converting ordinary methods into dynamically computed attributes. However, the |
| decorator syntax allows for user-defined decorators as well. Specifically, for |
| some function `my_decorator`, this: |
| |
| ```python |
| class C(object): |
| @my_decorator |
| def method(self): |
| # method body ... |
| ``` |
| |
| is equivalent to: |
| |
| |
| ```python |
| class C(object): |
| def method(self): |
| # method body ... |
| method = my_decorator(method) |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s2.17.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="2172-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="decorators-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.17.2 Pros |
| |
| Elegantly specifies some transformation on a method; the transformation might |
| eliminate some repetitive code, enforce invariants, etc. |
| |
| <a id="s2.17.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="2173-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="decorators-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.17.3 Cons |
| |
| Decorators can perform arbitrary operations on a function's arguments or return |
| values, resulting in surprising implicit behavior. Additionally, decorators |
| execute at import time. Failures in decorator code are pretty much impossible to |
| recover from. |
| |
| <a id="s2.17.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="2174-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="decorators-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.17.4 Decision |
| |
| Use decorators judiciously when there is a clear advantage. Decorators should |
| follow the same import and naming guidelines as functions. Decorator pydoc |
| should clearly state that the function is a decorator. Write unit tests for |
| decorators. |
| |
| Avoid external dependencies in the decorator itself (e.g. don't rely on files, |
| sockets, database connections, etc.), since they might not be available when the |
| decorator runs (at import time, perhaps from `pydoc` or other tools). A |
| decorator that is called with valid parameters should (as much as possible) be |
| guaranteed to succeed in all cases. |
| |
| Decorators are a special case of "top level code" - see [main](#s3.17-main) for |
| more discussion. |
| |
| Never use `@staticmethod` unless forced to in order to integrate with an API |
| defined in an existing library. Write a module level function instead. |
| |
| Use `@classmethod` only when writing a named constructor or a class-specific |
| routine that modifies necessary global state such as a process-wide cache. |
| |
| <a id="s2.18-threading"></a> |
| <a id="218-threading"></a> |
| |
| <a id="threading"></a> |
| ### 2.18 Threading |
| |
| Do not rely on the atomicity of built-in types. |
| |
| While Python's built-in data types such as dictionaries appear to have atomic |
| operations, there are corner cases where they aren't atomic (e.g. if `__hash__` |
| or `__eq__` are implemented as Python methods) and their atomicity should not be |
| relied upon. Neither should you rely on atomic variable assignment (since this |
| in turn depends on dictionaries). |
| |
| Use the Queue module's `Queue` data type as the preferred way to communicate |
| data between threads. Otherwise, use the threading module and its locking |
| primitives. Learn about the proper use of condition variables so you can use |
| `threading.Condition` instead of using lower-level locks. |
| |
| <a id="s2.19-power-features"></a> |
| <a id="219-power-features"></a> |
| |
| <a id="power-features"></a> |
| ### 2.19 Power Features |
| |
| Avoid these features. |
| |
| <a id="s2.19.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="2191-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="power-features-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.19.1 Definition |
| |
| Python is an extremely flexible language and gives you many fancy features such |
| as custom metaclasses, access to bytecode, on-the-fly compilation, dynamic |
| inheritance, object reparenting, import hacks, reflection (e.g. some uses of |
| `getattr()`), modification of system internals, etc. |
| |
| <a id="s2.19.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="2192-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="power-features-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.19.2 Pros |
| |
| These are powerful language features. They can make your code more compact. |
| |
| <a id="s2.19.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="2193-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="power-features-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.19.3 Cons |
| |
| It's very tempting to use these "cool" features when they're not absolutely |
| necessary. It's harder to read, understand, and debug code that's using unusual |
| features underneath. It doesn't seem that way at first (to the original author), |
| but when revisiting the code, it tends to be more difficult than code that is |
| longer but is straightforward. |
| |
| <a id="s2.19.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="2194-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="power-features-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.19.4 Decision |
| |
| Avoid these features in your code. |
| |
| Standard library modules and classes that internally use these features are okay |
| to use (for example, `abc.ABCMeta`, `collections.namedtuple`, `dataclasses`, |
| and `enum`). |
| |
| <a id="s2.20-modern-python"></a> |
| <a id="220-modern-python"></a> |
| |
| <a id="modern-python"></a> |
| ### 2.20 Modern Python: Python 3 and from \_\_future\_\_ imports |
| |
| Python 3 is here! While not every project is ready to |
| use it yet, all code should be written to be 3 compatible (and tested under |
| 3 when possible). |
| |
| <a id="s2.20.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="2201-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="modern-python-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.20.1 Definition |
| |
| Python 3 is a significant change in the Python language. While existing code is |
| often written with 2.7 in mind, there are some simple things to do to make code |
| more explicit about its intentions and thus better prepared for use under Python |
| 3 without modification. |
| |
| <a id="s2.20.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="2202-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="modern-python-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.20.2 Pros |
| |
| Code written with Python 3 in mind is more explicit and easier to get running |
| under Python 3 once all of the dependencies of your project are ready. |
| |
| <a id="s2.20.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="2203-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="modern-python-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.20.3 Cons |
| |
| Some people find the additional boilerplate to be ugly. It's unusual to add |
| imports to a module that doesn't actually require the features added by the |
| import. |
| |
| <a id="s2.20.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="2204-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="modern-python-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.20.4 Decision |
| |
| ##### from \_\_future\_\_ imports |
| |
| Use of `from __future__ import` statements is encouraged. All new code should |
| contain the following and existing code should be updated to be compatible when |
| possible: |
| |
| ```python |
| from __future__ import absolute_import |
| from __future__ import division |
| from __future__ import print_function |
| ``` |
| |
| If you are not already familiar with those, read up on each here: [absolute |
| imports](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0328/), [new `/` division |
| behavior](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0238/), and [the print |
| function](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3105/). |
| |
| |
| Please don't omit or remove these imports, even if they're not currently used in |
| the module, unless the code is Python 3 only. It is better to always have the |
| future imports in all files so that they are not forgotten during later edits |
| when someone starts using such a feature. |
| |
| There are other `from __future__` import statements. Use them as you see fit. We |
| do not include `unicode_literals` in our recommendations as it is not a clear |
| win due to implicit default codec conversion consequences it introduces in many |
| places within Python 2.7. Most code is better off with explicit use of `b''` and |
| `u''` bytes and unicode string literals as necessary. |
| |
| ##### The six, future, or past libraries |
| |
| When your project needs to actively 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. |
| |
| <a name="s2.21-typed-code"></a> |
| <a name="221-type-annotated-code"></a> |
| <a name="typed-code"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typed-code"></a> |
| ### 2.21 Type Annotated Code |
| |
| You can annotate Python 3 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 extension |
| modules. |
| |
| |
| <a id="s2.21.1-definition"></a> |
| <a id="2211-definition"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typed-code-definition"></a> |
| #### 2.21.1 Definition |
| |
| Type annotations (or "type hints") are for function or method arguments and |
| return values: |
| |
| ```python |
| def func(a: int) -> List[int]: |
| ``` |
| |
| You can also declare the type of a variable using a special comment: |
| |
| ```python |
| a = SomeFunc() # type: SomeType |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s2.21.2-pros"></a> |
| <a id="2212-pros"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typed-code-pros"></a> |
| #### 2.21.2 Pros |
| |
| Type annotations improve the readability and maintainability of your code. The |
| type checker will convert many runtime errors to build-time errors, and reduce |
| your ability to use [Power Features](#power-features). |
| |
| <a id="s2.21.3-cons"></a> |
| <a id="2213-cons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typed-code-cons"></a> |
| #### 2.21.3 Cons |
| |
| You will have to keep the type declarations up to date. You might see type errors that you think are valid code. Use of a [type checker](https://github.com/google/pytype) |
| may reduce your ability to use [Power Features](#power-features). |
| |
| <a id="s2.21.4-decision"></a> |
| <a id="2214-decision"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typed-code-decision"></a> |
| #### 2.21.4 Decision |
| |
| You are strongly encouraged to enable Python type analysis when updating code. |
| When adding or modifying public APIs, include type annotations and enable |
| checking via pytype in the build system. As static analysis is relatively new to |
| Python, we acknowledge that undesired side-effects (such as |
| wrongly |
| inferred types) may prevent adoption by some projects. In those situations, |
| authors are encouraged to add a comment with a TODO or link to a bug describing |
| the issue(s) currently preventing type annotation adoption in the BUILD file or |
| in the code itself as appropriate. |
| |
| <a id="s3-python-style-rules"></a> |
| <a id="3-python-style-rules"></a> |
| |
| <a id="python-style-rules"></a> |
| ## 3 Python Style Rules |
| |
| <a id="s3.1-semicolons"></a> |
| <a id="31-semicolons"></a> |
| |
| <a id="semicolons"></a> |
| ### 3.1 Semicolons |
| |
| Do not terminate your lines with semicolons, and do not use semicolons to put |
| two statements on the same line. |
| |
| <a id="s3.2-line-length"></a> |
| <a id="32-line-length"></a> |
| |
| <a id="line-length"></a> |
| ### 3.2 Line length |
| |
| Maximum line length is *80 characters*. |
| |
| Explicit exceptions to the 80 character limit: |
| |
| - Long import statements. |
| - URLs, pathnames, or long flags in comments. |
| - Long string module level constants not containing whitespace that would be |
| inconvenient to split across lines such as URLs or pathnames. |
| - Pylint disable comments. (e.g.: `# pylint: disable=invalid-name`) |
| |
| Do not use backslash line continuation except for `with` statements requiring |
| three or more context managers. |
| |
| Make use of Python's [implicit line joining inside parentheses, brackets and |
| braces](http://docs.python.org/reference/lexical_analysis.html#implicit-line-joining). |
| If necessary, you can add an extra pair of parentheses around an expression. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: foo_bar(self, width, height, color='black', design=None, x='foo', |
| emphasis=None, highlight=0) |
| |
| if (width == 0 and height == 0 and |
| color == 'red' and emphasis == 'strong'): |
| ``` |
| |
| When a literal string won't fit on a single line, use parentheses for implicit |
| line joining. |
| |
| ```python |
| x = ('This will build a very long long ' |
| 'long long long long long long string') |
| ``` |
| |
| Within comments, put long URLs on their own line if necessary. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: # See details at |
| # http://www.example.com/us/developer/documentation/api/content/v2.0/csv_file_name_extension_full_specification.html |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: # See details at |
| # http://www.example.com/us/developer/documentation/api/content/\ |
| # v2.0/csv_file_name_extension_full_specification.html |
| ``` |
| |
| It is permissible to use backslash continuation when defining a `with` statement |
| whose expressions span three or more lines. For two lines of expressions, use a |
| nested `with` statement: |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: with very_long_first_expression_function() as spam, \ |
| very_long_second_expression_function() as beans, \ |
| third_thing() as eggs: |
| place_order(eggs, beans, spam, beans) |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: with VeryLongFirstExpressionFunction() as spam, \ |
| VeryLongSecondExpressionFunction() as beans: |
| PlaceOrder(eggs, beans, spam, beans) |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: with very_long_first_expression_function() as spam: |
| with very_long_second_expression_function() as beans: |
| place_order(beans, spam) |
| ``` |
| |
| Make note of the indentation of the elements in the line continuation examples |
| above; see the [indentation](#s3.4-indentation) section for explanation. |
| |
| In all other cases where a line exceeds 80 characters, and the |
| [yapf](https://github.com/google/yapf/) |
| auto-formatter does not help bring the line below the limit, the line is allowed |
| to exceed this maximum. |
| |
| <a id="s3.3-parentheses"></a> |
| <a id="33-parentheses"></a> |
| |
| <a id="parentheses"></a> |
| ### 3.3 Parentheses |
| |
| Use parentheses sparingly. |
| |
| It is fine, though not required, to use parentheses around tuples. Do not use |
| them in return statements or conditional statements unless using parentheses for |
| implied line continuation or to indicate a tuple. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: if foo: |
| bar() |
| while x: |
| x = bar() |
| if x and y: |
| bar() |
| if not x: |
| bar() |
| # For a 1 item tuple the ()s are more visually obvious than the comma. |
| onesie = (foo,) |
| return foo |
| return spam, beans |
| return (spam, beans) |
| for (x, y) in dict.items(): ... |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: if (x): |
| bar() |
| if not(x): |
| bar() |
| return (foo) |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.4-indentation"></a> |
| <a id="34-indentation"></a> |
| |
| <a id="indentation"></a> |
| ### 3.4 Indentation |
| |
| Indent your code blocks with *4 spaces*. |
| |
| Never use tabs or mix tabs and spaces. In cases of implied line continuation, |
| you should align wrapped elements either vertically, as per the examples in the |
| [line length](#s3.2-line-length) section; or using a hanging indent of 4 spaces, |
| in which case there should be nothing after the open parenthesis or bracket on |
| the first line. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: # Aligned with opening delimiter |
| foo = long_function_name(var_one, var_two, |
| var_three, var_four) |
| meal = (spam, |
| beans) |
| |
| # Aligned with opening delimiter in a dictionary |
| foo = { |
| long_dictionary_key: value1 + |
| value2, |
| ... |
| } |
| |
| # 4-space hanging indent; nothing on first line |
| foo = long_function_name( |
| var_one, var_two, var_three, |
| var_four) |
| meal = ( |
| spam, |
| beans) |
| |
| # 4-space hanging indent in a dictionary |
| foo = { |
| long_dictionary_key: |
| long_dictionary_value, |
| ... |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: # Stuff on first line forbidden |
| foo = long_function_name(var_one, var_two, |
| var_three, var_four) |
| meal = (spam, |
| beans) |
| |
| # 2-space hanging indent forbidden |
| foo = long_function_name( |
| var_one, var_two, var_three, |
| var_four) |
| |
| # No hanging indent in a dictionary |
| foo = { |
| long_dictionary_key: |
| long_dictionary_value, |
| ... |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.4.1-trailing_comma"></a> |
| <a id="341-trailing_comma"></a> |
| <a id="trailing_comma"></a> |
| |
| <a id="trailing-comma"></a> |
| ### 3.4.1 Trailing commas in sequences of items? |
| |
| Trailing commas in sequences of items are recommended only when the closing |
| container token `]`, `)`, or `}` does not appear on the same line as the final |
| element. The presence of a trailing comma is also used as a hint to our Python |
| code auto-formatter [YAPF](https://pypi.org/project/yapf/) to direct it to auto-format the container |
| of items to one item per line when the `,` after the final element is present. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: golomb3 = [0, 1, 3] |
| Yes: golomb4 = [ |
| 0, |
| 1, |
| 4, |
| 6, |
| ] |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: golomb4 = [ |
| 0, |
| 1, |
| 4, |
| 6 |
| ] |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.5-blank-lines"></a> |
| <a id="35-blank-lines"></a> |
| |
| <a id="blank-lines"></a> |
| ### 3.5 Blank Lines |
| |
| Two blank lines between top-level definitions, be they function or class |
| definitions. One blank line between method definitions and between the `class` |
| line and the first method. No blank line following a `def` line. Use single |
| blank lines as you judge appropriate within functions or methods. |
| |
| <a id="s3.6-whitespace"></a> |
| <a id="36-whitespace"></a> |
| |
| <a id="whitespace"></a> |
| ### 3.6 Whitespace |
| |
| Follow standard typographic rules for the use of spaces around punctuation. |
| |
| No whitespace inside parentheses, brackets or braces. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2}, []) |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: spam( ham[ 1 ], { eggs: 2 }, [ ] ) |
| ``` |
| |
| No whitespace before a comma, semicolon, or colon. Do use whitespace after a |
| comma, semicolon, or colon, except at the end of the line. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: if x == 4: |
| print(x, y) |
| x, y = y, x |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: if x == 4 : |
| print(x , y) |
| x , y = y , x |
| ``` |
| |
| No whitespace before the open paren/bracket that starts an argument list, |
| indexing or slicing. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: spam(1) |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: spam (1) |
| ``` |
| |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: dict['key'] = list[index] |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: dict ['key'] = list [index] |
| ``` |
| |
| No trailing whitespace. |
| |
| Surround binary operators with a single space on either side for assignment |
| (`=`), comparisons (`==, <, >, !=, <>, <=, >=, in, not in, is, is not`), and |
| Booleans (`and, or, not`). Use your better judgment for the insertion of spaces |
| around arithmetic operators (`+`, `-`, `*`, `/`, `//`, `%`, `**`, `@`). |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: x == 1 |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: x<1 |
| ``` |
| |
| Never use spaces around `=` when passing keyword arguments or defining a default |
| parameter value, with one exception: [when a type annotation is |
| present](#typing-default-values), _do_ use spaces around the `=` for the default |
| parameter value. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: def complex(real, imag=0.0): return Magic(r=real, i=imag) |
| Yes: def complex(real, imag: float = 0.0): return Magic(r=real, i=imag) |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: def complex(real, imag = 0.0): return Magic(r = real, i = imag) |
| No: def complex(real, imag: float=0.0): return Magic(r = real, i = imag) |
| ``` |
| |
| Don't use spaces to vertically align tokens on consecutive lines, since it |
| becomes a maintenance burden (applies to `:`, `#`, `=`, etc.): |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| foo = 1000 # comment |
| long_name = 2 # comment that should not be aligned |
| |
| dictionary = { |
| 'foo': 1, |
| 'long_name': 2, |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: |
| foo = 1000 # comment |
| long_name = 2 # comment that should not be aligned |
| |
| dictionary = { |
| 'foo' : 1, |
| 'long_name': 2, |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| |
| <a id="Python_Interpreter"></a> |
| <a id="s3.7-shebang-line"></a> |
| <a id="37-shebang-line"></a> |
| |
| <a id="shebang-line"></a> |
| ### 3.7 Shebang Line |
| |
| Most `.py` files do not need to start with a `#!` line. Start the main file of a |
| program with |
| `#!/usr/bin/python` with an optional single digit `2` or `3` suffix per |
| [PEP-394](https://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0394/). |
| |
| This line is used by the kernel to find the Python interpreter, but is ignored |
| by Python when importing modules. It is only necessary on a file that will be |
| executed directly. |
| |
| <a id="s3.8-comments"></a> |
| <a id="38-comments-and-docstrings"></a> |
| |
| <a id="documentation"></a> |
| ### 3.8 Comments and Docstrings |
| |
| Be sure to use the right style for module, function, method docstrings and |
| inline comments. |
| |
| <a id="s3.8.1-comments-in-doc-strings"></a> |
| <a id="381-docstrings"></a> |
| <a id="comments-in-doc-strings"></a> |
| |
| <a id="docstrings"></a> |
| #### 3.8.1 Docstrings |
| |
| Python uses _docstrings_ to document code. A docstring is a string that is the |
| first statement in a package, module, class or function. These strings can be |
| extracted automatically through the `__doc__` member of the object and are used |
| by `pydoc`. |
| (Try running `pydoc` on your module to see how it looks.) Always use the three |
| double-quote `"""` format for docstrings (per [PEP |
| 257](https://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0257/)). |
| A docstring should be organized as a summary line (one physical line) terminated |
| by a period, question mark, or exclamation point, followed by a blank line, |
| followed by the rest of the docstring starting at the same cursor position as |
| the first quote of the first line. There are more formatting guidelines for |
| docstrings below. |
| |
| <a id="s3.8.2-comments-in-modules"></a> |
| <a id="382-modules"></a> |
| <a id="comments-in-modules"></a> |
| |
| <a id="module-docs"></a> |
| #### 3.8.2 Modules |
| |
| Every file should contain license boilerplate. |
| Choose the appropriate boilerplate for the license used by the project (for |
| example, Apache 2.0, BSD, LGPL, GPL) |
| |
| Files should start with a docstring describing the contents and usage of the |
| module. |
| ```python |
| """A one line summary of the module or program, terminated by a period. |
| |
| Leave one blank line. The rest of this docstring should contain an |
| overall description of the module or program. Optionally, it may also |
| contain a brief description of exported classes and functions and/or usage |
| examples. |
| |
| Typical usage example: |
| |
| foo = ClassFoo() |
| bar = foo.FunctionBar() |
| """ |
| ``` |
| |
| |
| <a id="s3.8.3-functions-and-methods"></a> |
| <a id="383-functions-and-methods"></a> |
| <a id="functions-and-methods"></a> |
| |
| <a id="function-docs"></a> |
| #### 3.8.3 Functions and Methods |
| |
| In this section, "function" means a method, function, or generator. |
| |
| A function must have a docstring, unless it meets all of the following criteria: |
| |
| - not externally visible |
| - very short |
| - obvious |
| |
| A docstring should give enough information to write a call to the function |
| without reading the function's code. The docstring should be descriptive-style |
| (`"""Fetches rows from a Bigtable."""`) rather than imperative-style (`"""Fetch |
| rows from a Bigtable."""`), except for `@property` data descriptors, which |
| should use the <a href="#384-classes">same style as attributes</a>. A docstring |
| should describe the function's calling syntax and its semantics, not its |
| implementation. For tricky code, comments alongside the code are more |
| appropriate than using docstrings. |
| |
| A method that overrides a method from a base class may have a simple docstring |
| sending the reader to its overridden method's docstring, such as `"""See base |
| class."""`. The rationale is that there is no need to repeat in many places |
| documentation that is already present in the base method's docstring. However, |
| if the overriding method's behavior is substantially different from the |
| overridden method, or details need to be provided (e.g., documenting additional |
| side effects), a docstring with at least those differences is required on the |
| overriding method. |
| |
| Certain aspects of a function should be documented in special sections, listed |
| below. Each section begins with a heading line, which ends with a colon. All |
| sections other than the heading should maintain a hanging indent of two or four |
| spaces (be consistent within a file). These sections can be omitted in cases |
| where the function's name and signature are informative enough that it can be |
| aptly described using a one-line docstring. |
| |
| <a id="doc-function-args"></a> |
| [*Args:*](#doc-function-args) |
| : List each parameter by name. A description should follow the name, and be |
| separated by a colon and a space. If the description is too long to fit on a |
| single 80-character line, use a hanging indent of 2 or 4 spaces (be |
| consistent with the rest of the file). |
| |
| The description should include required type(s) if the code does not contain |
| a corresponding type annotation. If a function accepts `*foo` (variable |
| length argument lists) and/or `**bar` (arbitrary keyword arguments), they |
| should be listed as `*foo` and `**bar`. |
| |
| <a id="doc-function-returns"></a> |
| [*Returns:* (or *Yields:* for generators)](#doc-function-returns) |
| : Describe the type and semantics of the return value. If the function only |
| returns None, this section is not required. It may also be omitted if the |
| docstring starts with Returns or Yields (e.g. `"""Returns row from Bigtable |
| as a tuple of strings."""`) and the opening sentence is sufficient to |
| describe return value. |
| |
| <a id="doc-function-raises"></a> |
| [*Raises:*](#doc-function-raises) |
| : List all exceptions that are relevant to the interface. You should not |
| document exceptions that get raised if the API specified in the docstring is |
| violated (because this would paradoxically make behavior under violation of |
| the API part of the API). |
| |
| ```python |
| def fetch_bigtable_rows(big_table, keys, other_silly_variable=None): |
| """Fetches rows from a Bigtable. |
| |
| Retrieves rows pertaining to the given keys from the Table instance |
| represented by big_table. Silly things may happen if |
| other_silly_variable is not None. |
| |
| Args: |
| big_table: An open Bigtable Table instance. |
| keys: A sequence of strings representing the key of each table row |
| to fetch. |
| other_silly_variable: Another optional variable, that has a much |
| longer name than the other args, and which does nothing. |
| |
| Returns: |
| A dict mapping keys to the corresponding table row data |
| fetched. Each row is represented as a tuple of strings. For |
| example: |
| |
| {'Serak': ('Rigel VII', 'Preparer'), |
| 'Zim': ('Irk', 'Invader'), |
| 'Lrrr': ('Omicron Persei 8', 'Emperor')} |
| |
| If a key from the keys argument is missing from the dictionary, |
| then that row was not found in the table. |
| |
| Raises: |
| IOError: An error occurred accessing the bigtable.Table object. |
| """ |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.8.4-comments-in-classes"></a> |
| <a id="384-classes"></a> |
| <a id="comments-in-classes"></a> |
| |
| <a id="class-docs"></a> |
| #### 3.8.4 Classes |
| |
| Classes should have a docstring below the class definition describing the class. |
| If your class has public attributes, they should be documented here in an |
| `Attributes` section and follow the same formatting as a |
| [function's `Args`](#doc-function-args) section. |
| |
| ```python |
| class SampleClass(object): |
| """Summary of class here. |
| |
| Longer class information.... |
| Longer class information.... |
| |
| Attributes: |
| likes_spam: A boolean indicating if we like SPAM or not. |
| eggs: An integer count of the eggs we have laid. |
| """ |
| |
| def __init__(self, likes_spam=False): |
| """Inits SampleClass with blah.""" |
| self.likes_spam = likes_spam |
| self.eggs = 0 |
| |
| def public_method(self): |
| """Performs operation blah.""" |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="comments-in-block-and-inline"></a> |
| <a id="s3.8.5-comments-in-block-and-inline"></a> |
| <a id="385-block-and-inline-comments"></a> |
| |
| <a id="comments"></a> |
| #### 3.8.5 Block and Inline Comments |
| |
| The final place to have comments is in tricky parts of the code. If you're going |
| to have to explain it at the next [code |
| review](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_review), you should comment it |
| now. Complicated operations get a few lines of comments before the operations |
| commence. Non-obvious ones get comments at the end of the line. |
| |
| ```python |
| # We use a weighted dictionary search to find out where i is in |
| # the array. We extrapolate position based on the largest num |
| # in the array and the array size and then do binary search to |
| # get the exact number. |
| |
| if i & (i-1) == 0: # True if i is 0 or a power of 2. |
| ``` |
| |
| To improve legibility, these comments should start at least 2 spaces away from |
| the code with the comment character `#`, followed by at least one space before |
| the text of the comment itself. |
| |
| On the other hand, never describe the code. Assume the person reading the code |
| knows Python (though not what you're trying to do) better than you do. |
| |
| ```python |
| # BAD COMMENT: Now go through the b array and make sure whenever i occurs |
| # the next element is i+1 |
| ``` |
| |
| <!-- The next section is copied from the C++ style guide. --> |
| |
| <a id="s3.8.6-punctuation-spelling-and-grammar"></a> |
| <a id="386-punctuation-spelling-and-grammar"></a> |
| <a id="spelling"></a> |
| <a id="punctuation"></a> |
| <a id="grammar"></a> |
| |
| <a id="punctuation-spelling-grammar"></a> |
| #### 3.8.6 Punctuation, Spelling and Grammar |
| |
| Pay attention to punctuation, spelling, and grammar; it is easier to read |
| well-written comments than badly written ones. |
| |
| Comments should be as readable as narrative text, with proper capitalization and |
| punctuation. In many cases, complete sentences are more readable than sentence |
| fragments. Shorter comments, such as comments at the end of a line of code, can |
| sometimes be less formal, but you should be consistent with your style. |
| |
| Although it can be frustrating to have a code reviewer point out that you are |
| using a comma when you should be using a semicolon, it is very important that |
| source code maintain a high level of clarity and readability. Proper |
| punctuation, spelling, and grammar help with that goal. |
| |
| <a id="s3.9-classes"></a> |
| <a id="39-classes"></a> |
| |
| <a id="classes"></a> |
| ### 3.9 Classes |
| |
| If a class inherits from no other base classes, explicitly inherit from |
| `object`. This also applies to nested classes. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: class SampleClass(object): |
| pass |
| |
| |
| class OuterClass(object): |
| |
| class InnerClass(object): |
| pass |
| |
| |
| class ChildClass(ParentClass): |
| """Explicitly inherits from another class already.""" |
| |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: class SampleClass: |
| pass |
| |
| |
| class OuterClass: |
| |
| class InnerClass: |
| pass |
| ``` |
| |
| Inheriting from `object` is needed to make properties work properly in Python 2 |
| and can protect your code from potential incompatibility with Python 3. It also |
| defines special methods that implement the default semantics of objects |
| including `__new__`, `__init__`, `__delattr__`, `__getattribute__`, |
| `__setattr__`, `__hash__`, `__repr__`, and `__str__`. |
| |
| <a id="s3.10-strings"></a> |
| <a id="310-strings"></a> |
| |
| <a id="strings"></a> |
| ### 3.10 Strings |
| |
| Use the `format` method or the `%` operator for formatting strings, even when |
| the parameters are all strings. Use your best judgment to decide between `+` and |
| `%` (or `format`) though. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: x = a + b |
| x = '%s, %s!' % (imperative, expletive) |
| x = '{}, {}'.format(first, second) |
| x = 'name: %s; score: %d' % (name, n) |
| x = 'name: {}; score: {}'.format(name, n) |
| x = f'name: {name}; score: {n}' # Python 3.6+ |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: x = '%s%s' % (a, b) # use + in this case |
| x = '{}{}'.format(a, b) # use + in this case |
| x = first + ', ' + second |
| x = 'name: ' + name + '; score: ' + str(n) |
| ``` |
| |
| Avoid using the `+` and `+=` operators to accumulate a string within a loop. |
| Since strings are immutable, this creates unnecessary temporary objects and |
| results in quadratic rather than linear running time. Instead, add each |
| substring to a list and `''.join` the list after the loop terminates (or, write |
| each substring to a `io.BytesIO` buffer). |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: items = ['<table>'] |
| for last_name, first_name in employee_list: |
| items.append('<tr><td>%s, %s</td></tr>' % (last_name, first_name)) |
| items.append('</table>') |
| employee_table = ''.join(items) |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: employee_table = '<table>' |
| for last_name, first_name in employee_list: |
| employee_table += '<tr><td>%s, %s</td></tr>' % (last_name, first_name) |
| employee_table += '</table>' |
| ``` |
| |
| Be consistent with your choice of string quote character within a file. Pick `'` |
| or `"` and stick with it. It is okay to use the other quote character on a |
| string to avoid the need to `\\ ` escape within the string. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| Python('Why are you hiding your eyes?') |
| Gollum("I'm scared of lint errors.") |
| Narrator('"Good!" thought a happy Python reviewer.') |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: |
| Python("Why are you hiding your eyes?") |
| Gollum('The lint. It burns. It burns us.') |
| Gollum("Always the great lint. Watching. Watching.") |
| ``` |
| |
| Prefer `"""` for multi-line strings rather than `'''`. Projects may choose to |
| use `'''` for all non-docstring multi-line strings if and only if they also use |
| `'` for regular strings. Docstrings must use `"""` regardless. |
| |
| Multi-line strings do not flow with the indentation of the rest of the program. |
| If you need to avoid embedding extra space in the string, use either |
| concatenated single-line strings or a multi-line string with |
| [`textwrap.dedent()`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/textwrap.html#textwrap.dedent) |
| to remove the initial space on each line: |
| |
| ```python |
| No: |
| long_string = """This is pretty ugly. |
| Don't do this. |
| """ |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| long_string = """This is fine if your use case can accept |
| extraneous leading spaces.""" |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| long_string = ("And this is fine if you can not accept\n" + |
| "extraneous leading spaces.") |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| long_string = ("And this too is fine if you can not accept\n" |
| "extraneous leading spaces.") |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| import textwrap |
| |
| long_string = textwrap.dedent("""\ |
| This is also fine, because textwrap.dedent() |
| will collapse common leading spaces in each line.""") |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.11-files-and-sockets"></a> |
| <a id="311-files-and-sockets"></a> |
| <a id="files-and-sockets"></a> |
| |
| <a id="files"></a> |
| ### 3.11 Files and Sockets |
| |
| Explicitly close files and sockets when done with them. |
| |
| Leaving files, sockets or other file-like objects open unnecessarily has many |
| downsides: |
| |
| - They may consume limited system resources, such as file descriptors. Code |
| that deals with many such objects may exhaust those resources unnecessarily |
| if they're not returned to the system promptly after use. |
| - Holding files open may prevent other actions such as moving or deleting |
| them. |
| - Files and sockets that are shared throughout a program may inadvertently be |
| read from or written to after logically being closed. If they are actually |
| closed, attempts to read or write from them will throw exceptions, making |
| the problem known sooner. |
| |
| Furthermore, while files and sockets are automatically closed when the file |
| object is destructed, tying the lifetime of the file object to the state of the |
| file is poor practice: |
| |
| - There are no guarantees as to when the runtime will actually run the file's |
| destructor. Different Python implementations use different memory management |
| techniques, such as delayed Garbage Collection, which may increase the |
| object's lifetime arbitrarily and indefinitely. |
| - Unexpected references to the file, e.g. in globals or exception tracebacks, |
| may keep it around longer than intended. |
| |
| The preferred way to manage files is using the ["with" |
| statement](http://docs.python.org/reference/compound_stmts.html#the-with-statement): |
| |
| ```python |
| with open("hello.txt") as hello_file: |
| for line in hello_file: |
| print(line) |
| ``` |
| |
| For file-like objects that do not support the "with" statement, use |
| `contextlib.closing()`: |
| |
| ```python |
| import contextlib |
| |
| with contextlib.closing(urllib.urlopen("http://www.python.org/")) as front_page: |
| for line in front_page: |
| print(line) |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.12-todo-comments"></a> |
| <a id="312-todo-comments"></a> |
| |
| <a id="todo"></a> |
| ### 3.12 TODO Comments |
| |
| Use `TODO` comments for code that is temporary, a short-term solution, or |
| good-enough but not perfect. |
| |
| A `TODO` comment begins with the string `TODO` in all caps and a parenthesized |
| name, e-mail address, or other identifier |
| of the person or issue with the best context about the problem. This is followed |
| by an explanation of what there is to do. |
| |
| The purpose is to have a consistent `TODO` format that can be searched to find |
| out how to get more details. A `TODO` is not a commitment that the person |
| referenced will fix the problem. Thus when you create a |
| `TODO`, it is almost always your name |
| that is given. |
| |
| ```python |
| # TODO(kl@gmail.com): Use a "*" here for string repetition. |
| # TODO(Zeke) Change this to use relations. |
| ``` |
| |
| If your `TODO` is of the form "At a future date do something" make sure that you |
| either include a very specific date ("Fix by November 2009") or a very specific |
| event ("Remove this code when all clients can handle XML responses."). |
| |
| <a id="s3.13-imports-formatting"></a> |
| <a id="313-imports-formatting"></a> |
| |
| <a id="imports-formatting"></a> |
| ### 3.13 Imports formatting |
| |
| Imports should be on separate lines. |
| |
| E.g.: |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: import os |
| import sys |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: import os, sys |
| ``` |
| |
| |
| Imports are always put at the top of the file, just after any module comments |
| and docstrings and before module globals and constants. Imports should be |
| 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 |
| ``` |
| |
| See [above](#from-future-imports) for more information about those. |
| |
| 2. Python standard library imports. For example: |
| |
| ```python |
| import sys |
| ``` |
| |
| 3. [third-party](https://pypi.org/) module |
| or package imports. For example: |
| |
| |
| ```python |
| import tensorflow as tf |
| ``` |
| |
| 4. Code repository |
| sub-package imports. For example: |
| |
| |
| ```python |
| from otherproject.ai import mind |
| ``` |
| |
| 5. **Deprecated:** application-specific imports that are part of the same |
| top level |
| sub-package as this file. For example: |
| |
| |
| ```python |
| from myproject.backend.hgwells import time_machine |
| ``` |
| |
| You may find older Google Python Style code doing this, but it is no longer |
| required. **New code is encouraged not to bother with this.** Simply treat |
| application-specific sub-package imports the same as other sub-package |
| imports. |
| |
| |
| Within each grouping, imports should be sorted lexicographically, ignoring case, |
| according to each module's full package path. Code may optionally place a blank |
| line between import sections. |
| |
| ```python |
| import collections |
| import queue |
| import sys |
| |
| from absl import app |
| from absl import flags |
| import bs4 |
| import cryptography |
| import tensorflow as tf |
| |
| from book.genres import scifi |
| from myproject.backend.hgwells import time_machine |
| from myproject.backend.state_machine import main_loop |
| from otherproject.ai import body |
| from otherproject.ai import mind |
| from otherproject.ai import soul |
| |
| # Older style code may have these imports down here instead: |
| #from myproject.backend.hgwells import time_machine |
| #from myproject.backend.state_machine import main_loop |
| ``` |
| |
| |
| <a id="s3.14-statements"></a> |
| <a id="314-statements"></a> |
| |
| <a id="statements"></a> |
| ### 3.14 Statements |
| |
| Generally only one statement per line. |
| |
| However, you may put the result of a test on the same line as the test only if |
| the entire statement fits on one line. In particular, you can never do so with |
| `try`/`except` since the `try` and `except` can't both fit on the same line, and |
| you can only do so with an `if` if there is no `else`. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| |
| if foo: bar(foo) |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: |
| |
| if foo: bar(foo) |
| else: baz(foo) |
| |
| try: bar(foo) |
| except ValueError: baz(foo) |
| |
| try: |
| bar(foo) |
| except ValueError: baz(foo) |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.15-access-control"></a> |
| <a id="315-access-control"></a> |
| <a id="access-control"></a> |
| |
| <a id="accessors"></a> |
| ### 3.15 Accessors |
| |
| If an accessor function would be trivial, you should use public variables |
| instead of accessor functions to avoid the extra cost of function calls in |
| Python. When more functionality is added you can use `property` to keep the |
| syntax consistent. |
| |
| On the other hand, if access is more complex, or the cost of accessing the |
| variable is significant, you should use function calls (following the |
| [Naming](#s3.16-naming) guidelines) such as `get_foo()` and |
| `set_foo()`. If the past behavior allowed access through a property, do not |
| bind the new accessor functions to the property. Any code still attempting to |
| access the variable by the old method should break visibly so they are made |
| aware of the change in complexity. |
| |
| <a id="s3.16-naming"></a> |
| <a id="316-naming"></a> |
| |
| <a id="naming"></a> |
| ### 3.16 Naming |
| |
| `module_name`, `package_name`, `ClassName`, `method_name`, `ExceptionName`, |
| `function_name`, `GLOBAL_CONSTANT_NAME`, `global_var_name`, `instance_var_name`, |
| `function_parameter_name`, `local_var_name`. |
| |
| |
| Function names, variable names, and filenames should be descriptive; eschew |
| abbreviation. In particular, do not use abbreviations that are ambiguous or |
| unfamiliar to readers outside your project, and do not abbreviate by deleting |
| letters within a word. |
| |
| Always use a `.py` filename extension. Never use dashes. |
| |
| <a id="s3.16.1-names-to-avoid"></a> |
| <a id="3161-names-to-avoid"></a> |
| |
| <a id="names-to-avoid"></a> |
| #### 3.16.1 Names to Avoid |
| |
| - single character names except for counters or iterators. You may use "e" as |
| an exception identifier in try/except statements. |
| - dashes (`-`) in any package/module name |
| - `__double_leading_and_trailing_underscore__` names (reserved by Python) |
| |
| <a id="s3.16.2-naming-conventions"></a> |
| <a id="3162-naming-convention"></a> |
| |
| <a id="naming-conventions"></a> |
| #### 3.16.2 Naming Conventions |
| |
| - "Internal" means internal to a module, or protected or private within a |
| class. |
| |
| - Prepending a single underscore (`_`) has some support for protecting module |
| variables and functions (not included with `from module import *`). While |
| prepending a double underscore (`__` aka "dunder") to an instance variable |
| or method effectively makes the variable or method private to its class |
| (using name mangling) we discourage its use as it impacts readability and |
| testability and isn't *really* private. |
| |
| - Place related classes and top-level functions together in a |
| module. |
| Unlike Java, there is no need to limit yourself to one class per module. |
| |
| - Use CapWords for class names, but lower\_with\_under.py for module names. |
| Although there are some old modules named CapWords.py, this is now |
| discouraged because it's confusing when the module happens to be named after |
| a class. ("wait -- did I write `import StringIO` or `from StringIO import |
| StringIO`?") |
| |
| - Underscores may appear in *unittest* method names starting with `test` to |
| separate logical components of the name, even if those components use |
| CapWords. One possible pattern is `test<MethodUnderTest>_<state>`; for |
| example `testPop_EmptyStack` is okay. There is no One Correct Way to name |
| test methods. |
| |
| <a id="s3.16.3-file-naming"></a> |
| <a id="3163-file-naming"></a> |
| |
| <a id="file-naming"></a> |
| #### 3.16.3 File Naming |
| |
| Python filenames must have a `.py` extension and must not contain dashes (`-`). |
| This allows them to be imported and unittested. If you want an executable to be |
| accessible without the extension, use a symbolic link or a simple bash wrapper |
| containing `exec "$0.py" "$@"`. |
| |
| <a id="s3.16.4-guidelines-derived-from-guidos-recommendations"></a> |
| <a id="3164-guidelines-derived-from-guidos-recommendations"></a> |
| |
| <a id="guidelines-derived-from-guidos-recommendations"></a> |
| #### 3.16.4 Guidelines derived from Guido's Recommendations |
| |
| <table rules="all" border="1" summary="Guidelines from Guido's Recommendations" |
| cellspacing="2" cellpadding="2"> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <th>Type</th> |
| <th>Public</th> |
| <th>Internal</th> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <td>Packages</td> |
| <td><code>lower_with_under</code></td> |
| <td></td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <td>Modules</td> |
| <td><code>lower_with_under</code></td> |
| <td><code>_lower_with_under</code></td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <td>Classes</td> |
| <td><code>CapWords</code></td> |
| <td><code>_CapWords</code></td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <td>Exceptions</td> |
| <td><code>CapWords</code></td> |
| <td></td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <td>Functions</td> |
| <td><code>lower_with_under()</code></td> |
| <td><code>_lower_with_under()</code></td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <td>Global/Class Constants</td> |
| <td><code>CAPS_WITH_UNDER</code></td> |
| <td><code>_CAPS_WITH_UNDER</code></td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <td>Global/Class Variables</td> |
| <td><code>lower_with_under</code></td> |
| <td><code>_lower_with_under</code></td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <td>Instance Variables</td> |
| <td><code>lower_with_under</code></td> |
| <td><code>_lower_with_under</code> (protected)</td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <td>Method Names</td> |
| <td><code>lower_with_under()</code></td> |
| <td><code>_lower_with_under()</code> (protected)</td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <td>Function/Method Parameters</td> |
| <td><code>lower_with_under</code></td> |
| <td></td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <td>Local Variables</td> |
| <td><code>lower_with_under</code></td> |
| <td></td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| </table> |
| |
| While Python supports making things private by using a leading double underscore |
| `__` (aka. "dunder") prefix on a name, this is discouraged. Prefer the use of a |
| single underscore. They are easier to type, read, and to access from small |
| unittests. Lint warnings take care of invalid access to protected members. |
| |
| |
| <a id="s3.17-main"></a> |
| <a id="317-main"></a> |
| |
| <a id="main"></a> |
| ### 3.17 Main |
| |
| Even a file meant to be used as an executable should be importable and a mere |
| import should not have the side effect of executing the program's main |
| functionality. The main functionality should be in a `main()` function. |
| |
| In Python, `pydoc` as well as unit tests require modules to be importable. Your |
| code should always check `if __name__ == '__main__'` before executing your main |
| program so that the main program is not executed when the module is imported. |
| |
| ```python |
| def main(): |
| ... |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| main() |
| ``` |
| |
| All code at the top level will be executed when the module is imported. Be |
| careful not to call functions, create objects, or perform other operations that |
| should not be executed when the file is being `pydoc`ed. |
| |
| <a id="s3.18-function-length"></a> |
| <a id="318-function-length"></a> |
| |
| <a id="function-length"></a> |
| ### 3.18 Function length |
| |
| Prefer small and focused functions. |
| |
| We recognize that long functions are sometimes appropriate, so no hard limit is |
| placed on function length. If a function exceeds about 40 lines, think about |
| whether it can be broken up without harming the structure of the program. |
| |
| Even if your long function works perfectly now, someone modifying it in a few |
| months may add new behavior. This could result in bugs that are hard to find. |
| Keeping your functions short and simple makes it easier for other people to read |
| and modify your code. |
| |
| You could find long and complicated functions when working with |
| some code. Do not be intimidated by modifying existing code: if working with such |
| a function proves to be difficult, you find that errors are hard to debug, or |
| you want to use a piece of it in several different contexts, consider breaking |
| up the function into smaller and more manageable pieces. |
| |
| <a id="s3.19-type-annotations"></a> |
| <a id="319-type-annotations"></a> |
| |
| <a id="type-annotations"></a> |
| ### 3.19 Type Annotations |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.1-general"></a> |
| <a id="3191-general-rules"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typing-general"></a> |
| #### 3.19.1 General Rules |
| |
| * 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()` |
| * 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. |
| - Annotate code that is prone to type-related errors (previous bugs or |
| complexity). |
| - Annotate code that is hard to understand. |
| - Annotate code as it becomes stable from a types perspective. In many |
| cases, you can annotate all the functions in mature code without losing |
| too much flexibility. |
| |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.2-line-breaking"></a> |
| <a id="3192-line-breaking"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typing-line-breaking"></a> |
| #### 3.19.2 Line Breaking |
| |
| Try to follow the existing [indentation](#indentation) rules. |
| |
| After annotating, many function signatures will become "one parameter per line". |
| |
| ```python |
| def my_method(self, |
| first_var: int, |
| second_var: Foo, |
| third_var: Optional[Bar]) -> int: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| Always prefer breaking between variables, and not for example between variable |
| names and type annotations. However, if everything fits on the same line, |
| go for it. |
| |
| ```python |
| def my_method(self, first_var: int) -> int: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| If the combination of the function name, the last parameter, and the return type |
| is too long, indent by 4 in a new line. |
| |
| ```python |
| def my_method( |
| self, first_var: int) -> Tuple[MyLongType1, MyLongType1]: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| When the return type does not fit on the same line as the last parameter, the |
| preferred way is to indent the parameters by 4 on a new line and align the |
| closing parenthesis with the def. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| def my_method( |
| self, other_arg: Optional[MyLongType] |
| ) -> Dict[OtherLongType, MyLongType]: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| `pylint` allows you to move the closing parenthesis to a new line and align |
| with the opening one, but this is less readable. |
| |
| ```python |
| No: |
| def my_method(self, |
| other_arg: Optional[MyLongType] |
| ) -> Dict[OtherLongType, MyLongType]: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| As in the examples above, prefer not to break types. However, sometimes they are |
| too long to be on a single line (try to keep sub-types unbroken). |
| |
| ```python |
| def my_method( |
| self, |
| first_var: Tuple[List[MyLongType1], |
| List[MyLongType2]], |
| second_var: List[Dict[ |
| MyLongType3, MyLongType4]]) -> None: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| If a single name and type is too long, consider using an |
| [alias](#typing-aliases) for the type. The last resort is to break after the |
| colon and indent by 4. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| def my_function( |
| long_variable_name: |
| long_module_name.LongTypeName, |
| ) -> None: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: |
| def my_function( |
| long_variable_name: long_module_name. |
| LongTypeName, |
| ) -> None: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.3-forward-declarations"></a> |
| <a id="3193-forward-declarations"></a> |
| |
| <a id="forward-declarations"></a> |
| #### 3.19.3 Forward Declarations |
| |
| If you need to use a class name from the same module that is not yet defined -- |
| for example, if you need the class inside the class declaration, or if you use a |
| class that is defined below -- use a string for the class name. |
| |
| ```python |
| class MyClass(object): |
| |
| def __init__(self, |
| stack: List["MyClass"]) -> None: |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.4-default-values"></a> |
| <a id="3194-default-values"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typing-default-values"></a> |
| #### 3.19.4 Default Values |
| |
| As per |
| [PEP-008](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/#other-recommendations), use |
| spaces around the `=` _only_ for arguments that have both a type annotation and |
| a default value. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| def func(a: int = 0) -> int: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| ```python |
| No: |
| def func(a:int=0) -> int: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.5-none-type"></a> |
| <a id="3195-nonetype"></a> |
| |
| <a id="none-type"></a> |
| #### 3.19.5 NoneType |
| |
| In the Python type system, `NoneType` is a "first class" type, and for typing |
| purposes, `None` is an alias for `NoneType`. If an argument can be `None`, it |
| has to be declared! You can use `Union`, but if there is only one other type, |
| use `Optional`. |
| |
| Use explicit `Optional` instead of implicit `Optional`. Earlier versions of PEP |
| 484 allowed `a: Text = None` to be interpretted as `a: Optional[Text] = None`, |
| but that is no longer the preferred behavior. |
| |
| ```python |
| Yes: |
| def func(a: Optional[Text], b: Optional[Text] = None) -> Text: |
| ... |
| def multiple_nullable_union(a: Union[None, Text, int]) -> Text |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| No: |
| def nullable_union(a: Union[None, Text]) -> Text: |
| ... |
| def implicit_optional(a: Text = None) -> Text: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.6-aliases"></a> |
| <a id="3196-type-aliases"></a> |
| <a id="typing-aliases"></a> |
| |
| <a id="type-aliases"></a> |
| #### 3.19.6 Type Aliases |
| |
| You can declare aliases of complex types. The name of an alias should be |
| CapWorded. If the alias is used only in this module, it should be |
| \_Private. |
| |
| For example, if the name of the module together with the name of the type is too |
| long: |
| |
| ```python |
| _ShortName = module_with_long_name.TypeWithLongName |
| ComplexMap = Mapping[Text, List[Tuple[int, int]]] |
| ``` |
| |
| Other examples are complex nested types and multiple return variables from a |
| function (as a tuple). |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.7-ignore"></a> |
| <a id="3197-ignoring-types"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typing-ignore"></a> |
| #### 3.19.7 Ignoring Types |
| |
| You can disable type checking on a line with the special comment |
| `# type: ignore`. |
| |
| `pytype` has a disable option for specific errors (similar to lint): |
| |
| ```python |
| # pytype: disable=attribute-error |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.8-comments"></a> |
| <a id="3198-typing-internal-variables"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typing-variables"></a> |
| #### 3.19.8 Typing Variables |
| |
| If an internal variable has a type that is hard or impossible to infer, you can |
| specify its type in a couple ways. |
| |
| <a id="type-comments"></a> |
| [*Type Comments:*](#type-comments) |
| : Use a `# type:` comment on the end of the line |
| |
| ```python |
| a = SomeUndecoratedFunction() # type: Foo |
| ``` |
| |
| [*Annotated Assignments*](#annotated-assignments) |
| : Use a colon and type between the variable name and value, as with function |
| arguments. |
| |
| ```python |
| a: Foo = SomeUndecoratedFunction() |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.9-tuples"></a> |
| <a id="3199-tuples-vs-lists"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typing-tuples"></a> |
| #### 3.19.9 Tuples vs Lists |
| |
| Unlike Lists, which can only have a single type, Tuples can have either a single |
| repeated type or a set number of elements with different types. The latter is |
| commonly used as return type from a function. |
| |
| ```python |
| a = [1, 2, 3] # type: List[int] |
| b = (1, 2, 3) # type: Tuple[int, ...] |
| c = (1, "2", 3.5) # type: Tuple[int, Text, float] |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.10-type-var"></a> |
| <a id="31910-typevar"></a> |
| <a id="typing-type-var"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typevars"></a> |
| #### 3.19.10 TypeVars |
| |
| The Python type system has |
| [generics](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0484/#generics). The factory |
| function `TypeVar` is a common way to use them. |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| ```python |
| from typing import List, TypeVar |
| T = TypeVar("T") |
| ... |
| def next(l: List[T]) -> T: |
| return l.pop() |
| ``` |
| |
| A TypeVar can be constrained: |
| |
| ```python |
| AddableType = TypeVar("AddableType", int, float, Text) |
| def add(a: AddableType, b: AddableType) -> AddableType: |
| return a + b |
| ``` |
| |
| 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. |
| |
| ```python |
| from typing import AnyStr |
| def check_length(x: AnyStr) -> AnyStr: |
| if len(x) <= 42: |
| return x |
| raise ValueError() |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.11-strings"></a> |
| <a id="31911-string-types"></a> |
| |
| <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. |
| |
| For Python 3 only code, prefer to use `str`. `Text` is also acceptable. Be |
| consistent in using one or the other. |
| |
| For Python 2 compatible code, use `Text`. In some rare cases, `str` may make |
| sense; typically to aid compatibility when the return types aren't the same |
| between the two Python versions. Avoid using `unicode`: it doesn't exist in |
| Python 3. |
| |
| The reason this discrepancy exists is because `str` means different things |
| depending on the Python version. |
| |
| ```python |
| No: |
| def py2_code(x: str) -> unicode: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| For code that deals with binary data, use `bytes`. |
| |
| ```python |
| def deals_with_binary_data(x: bytes) -> bytes: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| For Python 2 compatible code that processes text data (`str` or `unicode` in |
| Python 2, `str` in Python 3), use `Text`. For Python 3 only code that process |
| text data, prefer `str`. |
| |
| ```python |
| from typing import Text |
| ... |
| def py2_compatible(x: Text) -> Text: |
| ... |
| def py3_only(x: str) -> str: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| If the type can be either bytes or text, use `Union`, with the appropriate text |
| type. |
| |
| ```python |
| from typing import Text, Union |
| ... |
| def py2_compatible(x: Union[bytes, Text]) -> Union[bytes, Text]: |
| ... |
| def py3_only(x: Union[bytes, str]) -> Union[bytes, str]: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| If all the string types of a function are always the same, for example if the |
| return type is the same as the argument type in the code above, use |
| [AnyStr](#typing-type-var). |
| |
| Writing it like this will simplify the process of porting the code to Python 3. |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.12-imports"></a> |
| <a id="31912-imports-for-typing"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typing-imports"></a> |
| #### 3.19.12 Imports For Typing |
| |
| For classes from the `typing` module, always import the class itself. You are |
| explicitly allowed to import multiple specific classes on one line from the |
| `typing` module. Ex: |
| |
| ```python |
| from typing import Any, Dict, Optional |
| ``` |
| |
| Given that this way of importing from `typing` adds items to the local |
| namespace, any names in `typing` should be treated similarly to keywords, and |
| not be defined in your Python code, typed or not. If there is a collision |
| between a type and an existing name in a module, import it using |
| `import x as y`. |
| |
| ```python |
| from typing import Any as AnyType |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.13-conditional-imports"></a> |
| <a id="31913-conditional-imports"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typing-conditional-imports"></a> |
| #### 3.19.13 Conditional Imports |
| |
| Use conditional imports only in exceptional cases where the additional imports |
| needed for type checking must be avoided at runtime. This pattern is |
| discouraged; alternatives such as refactoring the code to allow top level |
| imports should be preferred. |
| |
| Imports that are needed only for type annotations can be placed within an |
| `if TYPE_CHECKING:` block. |
| |
| - Conditionally imported types need to be referenced as strings, to be |
| forward compatible with Python 3.6 where the annotation expressions are |
| actually evaluated. |
| - Only entities that are used solely for typing should be defined here; this |
| includes aliases. Otherwise it will be a runtime error, as the module will |
| not be imported at runtime. |
| - The block should be right after all the normal imports. |
| - There should be no empty lines in the typing imports list. |
| - Sort this list as if it were a regular imports list. |
| |
| ```python |
| import typing |
| if typing.TYPE_CHECKING: |
| import sketch |
| def f(x: "sketch.Sketch"): ... |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="s3.19.14-circular-deps"></a> |
| <a id="31914-circular-dependencies"></a> |
| |
| <a id="typing-circular-deps"></a> |
| #### 3.19.14 Circular Dependencies |
| |
| Circular dependencies that are caused by typing are code smells. Such code is a |
| good candidate for refactoring. Although technically it is possible to keep |
| circular dependencies, the [build system](#typing-build-deps) will not let you |
| do so because each module has to depend on the other. |
| |
| Replace modules that create circular dependency imports with `Any`. Set an |
| [alias](#typing-aliases) with a meaningful name, and use the real type name from |
| this module (any attribute of Any is Any). Alias definitions should be separated |
| from the last import by one line. |
| |
| ```python |
| from typing import Any |
| |
| some_mod = Any # some_mod.py imports this module. |
| ... |
| |
| def my_method(self, var: some_mod.SomeType) -> None: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| <a id="typing-generics"></a> |
| <a id="s3.19.15-generics"></a> |
| <a id="31915-generics"></a> |
| |
| <a id="generics"></a> |
| #### 3.19.15 Generics |
| |
| When annotating, prefer to specify type parameters for generic types; otherwise, |
| [the generics' parameters will be assumed to be `Any`](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0484/#the-any-type). |
| |
| ```python |
| def get_names(employee_ids: List[int]) -> Dict[int, Any]: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| # These are both interpreted as get_names(employee_ids: List[Any]) -> Dict[Any, Any] |
| def get_names(employee_ids: list) -> Dict: |
| ... |
| |
| def get_names(employee_ids: List) -> Dict: |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| If the best type parameter for a generic is `Any`, make it explicit, but |
| remember that in many cases [`TypeVar`](#typing-type-var) might be more |
| appropriate: |
| |
| ```python |
| def get_names(employee_ids: List[Any]) -> Dict[Any, Text]: |
| """Returns a mapping from employee ID to employee name for given IDs.""" |
| ``` |
| |
| ```python |
| T = TypeVar('T') |
| def get_names(employee_ids: List[T]) -> Dict[T, Text]: |
| """Returns a mapping from employee ID to employee name for given IDs.""" |
| ``` |
| |
| |
| <a id="4-parting-words"></a> |
| |
| <a id="consistency"></a> |
| ## 4 Parting Words |
| |
| *BE CONSISTENT*. |
| |
| If you're editing code, take a few minutes to look at the code around you and |
| determine its style. If they use spaces around all their arithmetic operators, |
| you should too. If their comments have little boxes of hash marks around them, |
| make your comments have little boxes of hash marks around them too. |
| |
| The point of having style guidelines is to have a common vocabulary of coding so |
| people can concentrate on what you're saying rather than on how you're saying |
| it. We present global style rules here so people know the vocabulary, but local |
| style is also important. If code you add to a file looks drastically different |
| from the existing code around it, it throws readers out of their rhythm when |
| they go to read it. Avoid this. |
| |
| |