7

Consider:

from __future__ import annotations

class A:
    @classmethod
    def get(cls) -> A:
        return cls()

class B(A):
    pass

def func() -> B: # Line 12
    return B.get()

Running mypy on this we get:

$ mypy test.py
test.py:12: error: Incompatible return value type (got "A", expected "B")
Found 1 error in 1 file (checked 1 source file)

Additionally, I have checked to see if old-style recursive annotations work. That is:

# from __future__ import annotations

class A:
    @classmethod
    def get(cls) -> "A":
# ...

...to no avail.

Of course one could do:

from typing import cast

def func() -> B: # Line 12
    return cast(B, B.get())

Every time this case pops up. But I would like to avoid doing that.

How should one go about typing this?

2
  • I'm unsure about what you're asking. If you want to return A, you need to cast it explicitely. If you just want to type-annotate your function correctly, why not def func() -> A?
    – Le Minaw
    Jan 29, 2021 at 23:53
  • I actually want to return B in func. For example, suppose we have classes representing database entities. We have a common class Entity and subclasses like User and Project. These subclasses also have additional, idiosyncratic attributes that matter. We want to be explicit about whether your returning a User or Project because that will constrain what we can do downstream.
    – webelo
    Jan 29, 2021 at 23:58

1 Answer 1

5

The cls and self parameters are usually inferred by mpyp to avoid a lot of redundant code, but when required they can be specified explicitly by annotations.

In this case the explicit type for the class method would look like the following:

class A:
    @classmethod
    def get(cls: Type[A]) -> A:
        return cls()

So what we really need here is a way to make Type[A] a generic parameter, such that when the class method is called from a child class, you can reference the child class instead. Luckily, we have TypeVar values for this.

Working this into your existing example we will get the following:

from __future__ import annotations

from typing import TypeVar, Type


T = TypeVar('T')


class A:
    @classmethod
    def get(cls: Type[T]) -> T:
        return cls()


class B(A):
    pass


def func() -> B:
    return B.get()

Now mypy should be your friend again! 😎

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