_posixsubprocess
The file you are referencing is a Python module written in C. It's not a "stub" file. The real implementation can be found in the stdlib at Modules/_posixsubprocess.c
. You can see how writing a C/C++ extension is written by having a look at Building C and C++ Extensions. This should help you understanding the code in _posixsubprocess.c
.
In order to add type-hints to that file (which is an "Extension Module" as it is written in C), the type hints are added to a "stub" file with the extension .pyi
.
That file can be found in the typeshed which is a collection of stub files. The typeshed also contains stubs for third-party modules which is a historical remnant. That is no longer needed since PEP-561 has been adopted.
Concerning stub/pyi files
Stub files contain type-hinting information of normal Python modules. The full official documentation can be found in the section about stub-files in PEP-484.
For example, if you have a Python module mymodule.py
like this:
def myfunction(name):
return "Hello " + name
Then you can add type-hints via a stub-file mymodule.pyi
. Note that here the ellipsis (...
) is part of the syntax, so the code-block below really shows the complete file contents:
def myfunction(name: str) -> str: ...
They look very similar to C header files in that they contain only the function signatures, but their use is purely optional.
You can also add type hints directly in the .py
module like the following:
def myfunction(name: str) -> str:
return "Hello " + name
But there are some cases where you want to keep them separate in stubs:
- You want to keep your code Python 2 compatible and don't like the
# type: ...
comment syntax
- You use function annotations for something else but still want to use type-hints
- You are adding type-hints into an existing code-base and want to keep code-churn in existing files minimal
.so
/.pyd
file which can be imported if it's findable on the path. You can "easily" create your own modules in C. I doubt that it'scython
though. It's more likely that it uses the standard way of writing C extensions_posixsubprocess
, which is - in CPython - a.c
file, But you also mention that you see it as a.pyi
file. Where exactly did you find that.pyi
file? Do you have a link to the Python source repository?python
. It's cleared now. Also, I found this link which will be quite helpful to understand implementation level details realpython.com/cpython-source-code-guide/…