1

For example,

def print_list(my_list: Union[List[int], List[str]]):
    ...

Then, my_list will be a list of integers or a list of strings, but not a list of mixed elements of integer and string. But I think this is too complicated, so I want to create a new type UnionList like this:

UnionList = ...  # I don't know how to define this

def print_list(my_list: UnionList[int, str]):
    ...

How should I define UnionList to represent the same type as Union[List[T1], List[T2], ...]?

1
  • how about list[int] | list[str]?
    – joel
    Sep 27, 2022 at 21:37

1 Answer 1

3

Create a generic alias with typing.TypeVar and typing.Union (| since Python 3.10):

from typing import TypeVar

T1 = TypeVar("T1")
T2 = TypeVar("T2")
UnionList = list[T1] | list[T2]


def print_list(my_list: UnionList[int, str]):
    ...
2
  • 1
    Nice. Small correction: The | as type union is only available for Python 3.10+. See here. Sep 28, 2022 at 9:59
  • Oh, nice catch! I've fixed it. Sep 28, 2022 at 10:09

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