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?
A
, you need to cast it explicitely. If you just want to type-annotate your function correctly, why notdef func() -> A
?B
infunc
. For example, suppose we have classes representing database entities. We have a common classEntity
and subclasses likeUser
andProject
. These subclasses also have additional, idiosyncratic attributes that matter. We want to be explicit about whether your returning aUser
orProject
because that will constrain what we can do downstream.