1
>>> list("abc")
['a', 'b', 'c']
>>> list = 42
>>> list("xyz")
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: 'int' object is not callable

How do i find such bugs if one has accidentally assigned values to class-names and function definitions? I wanted to use AST but not really sure how do i do it?

6
  • 2
    You make sure you have a good candidate interview process, no good programmer in a real world working environment would give their variables such names
    – Sayse
    Jun 10, 2022 at 13:41
  • The AST doesn't really help you here (at least, not by itself). You need to know what names are already in use to determine if assigning to list will result in a bug.
    – chepner
    Jun 10, 2022 at 13:48
  • this is an example also of why not to name a variable as dict
    – rv.kvetch
    Jun 10, 2022 at 13:51
  • The same way you find other bugs, i.e. debug, write tests, run code and print stuff all around Jun 10, 2022 at 13:51
  • maybe import builtins; builtins.list('xyz') might help though.
    – rv.kvetch
    Jun 10, 2022 at 13:52

2 Answers 2

3

One approach is to extract ast nodes for constructs that could contain builtin shadowing; for example, assignments, function signatures, for-loops, and comprehensions, and then check if any target names belonging to these ast objects are builtins:

import warnings
import builtins, ast
def extract_names(node):
  if isinstance(node, ast.Name):
     yield node.id
  elif isinstance(node, ast.arg):
     yield node.arg
  elif isinstance(node, list):
     for i in node: yield from extract_names(i)
  else:
     for i in getattr(node, '_fields', []): yield from extract_names(getattr(node, i))

def log_shadowing(node, names):
   for i in names:
      if i in dir(builtins):
         warnings.warn(f"On line {node.lineno}: shadowing of '{i}'")

def check_node(node):
   if isinstance(node, ast.Assign):
      log_shadowing(node, extract_names(node.targets))
   if isinstance(node, ast.FunctionDef):
      log_shadowing(node, [node.name, *extract_names(node.args)])
   if isinstance(node, ast.For):
      log_shadowing(node, extract_names(node.target))
   if isinstance(node, (ast.ListComp, ast.SetComp, ast.DictComp)):
      for i in node.generators:
         log_shadowing(node, extract_names(i.target)) 

sample = """ 
list = 10
def f(a, b, dict, c):
   pass

for set in range(10):
   pass

r = [next for next in range(10)]
"""
for i in ast.walk(ast.parse(sample)):
   check_node(i)

Output:

<stdin>:4: UserWarning: On line 2: shadowing of 'list'
<stdin>:4: UserWarning: On line 3: shadowing of 'dict'
<stdin>:4: UserWarning: On line 6: shadowing of 'set'
<stdin>:4: UserWarning: On line 9: shadowing of 'next'
0
2

you need to compare list to its original value, which can be found in the module builtins:

import builtins
print(builtins.list == list) # true
list = 42
print(builtins.list == list) # false

The better thing is to just avoid assigning to built-in functions. A good code editor will make built-in functions a different color

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