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Detect imports that can be lazy

Project description

flake8-lazy

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flake8-lazy is a flake8 plugin that finds imports which can be made lazy in Python 3.15 (following PEP 810). See the post here for more on the development of this tool!

flake8-lazy helps keep import-time overhead low by detecting imports that can be declared as lazy in __lazy_modules__. For this package itself, flake8-lazy --help runs roughly twice as fast when using Python 3.15's new lazy import system.

Error messages will mention __lazy_modules__ since that is backward compatible with older Python versions, but the lazy keyword is supported too.

Quick run

There's a standalone flake8-lazy runner. If you use uv or pipx, you can run it from anywhere without installation:

uvx flake8-lazy <filenames>
# OR
pipx run flake8-lazy <filenames>

Try --format=lazy-modules to get copy-paste lines or even --apply=list to have the tool update your lazy modules automatically! For maximum laziness, try --apply=dynamic.

The standalone runner also reads defaults from a [tool.flake8-lazy.standalone] table in your pyproject.toml; see the CLI docs for details.

Install

python -m pip install flake8-lazy

Usually you would include this in some sort of dependency-group in your project, e.g. dev or lint.

flake8 will automatically discover the plugin.

Pre-commit

flake8-lazy ships a pre-commit / prek hook. Add it to your .pre-commit-config.yaml:

- repo: https://github.com/henryiii/flake8-lazy
  rev: v0.8.2
  hooks:
    - id: flake8-lazy

The hook reports diagnostics by default; add args: [--apply=list] (or another --apply mode) to have it rewrite files in place on commit. This is the built-in runner, use flake8's pre-commit integration if you want flake8 to run it.

See the full documentation for details, examples, and the standalone CLI runner.

Rule codes

1xx: Missing lazy declarations

  • LZY101: Missing lazy stdlib module in __lazy_modules__
  • LZY102: Missing lazy third-party or local module in __lazy_modules__

2xx: __lazy_modules__ validation

  • LZY201: __lazy_modules__ list is not sorted
  • LZY202: Module listed in __lazy_modules__ is never imported
  • LZY203: Module listed in __lazy_modules__ appears more than once
  • LZY204: __lazy_modules__ is assigned after importing modules it names
  • LZY205: Module name in __lazy_modules__ is relative (.name) instead of absolute

3xx: Native lazy keyword (Python 3.15+)

  • LZY301: Lazy import inside suppress(ImportError) is misleading
  • LZY302: Module is declared lazy by both lazy keyword and __lazy_modules__
  • LZY303: Module is imported both eagerly and lazily

4xx: Lazy import safety and semantics

  • LZY401: Module is declared lazy but accessed at the top level
  • LZY402: Module is an enclosing package for this file and should not be lazy

Basic example

__lazy_modules__ = ["argparse", "requests"]

import argparse
import requests


def main() -> None:
    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
    parser.add_argument("url")
    args = parser.parse_args()

    response = requests.get(args.url, timeout=5)
    print(response.status_code)

In this example, requests is only used inside main, so it can be lazy. The checker expects it in __lazy_modules__ and emits LZY102 until you add it. Running --help will not import requests, resulting in a more responsive app!

Authoring __lazy_modules__

Use a static, sorted list of strings:

__lazy_modules__ = [
    "argparse",
    "numpy",
    "pathlib",
]

You can also use sets; sets are slower to construct, but faster to check - around 2 items is enough to make sets faster.

Dynamic values (i.e. a custom object assigned to __lazy_modules__) are also supported. If flake8-lazy detects a non-static assignment it treats the file as fully covered and suppresses all LZY1xx/LZY2xx diagnostics. Use --apply=dynamic to have the tool write a simple catch-all object:

class AllLazy:
    @staticmethod
    def __contains__(_: str) -> bool:
        return True


__lazy_modules__ = AllLazy()

How detection works

flake8-lazy inspects module-scope imports and module runtime usage.

  • Counts top-level import and from ... import ... statements.
  • Currently treats annotation-only usage as lazy-capable (from __future__ import annotations if not using 3.14+).
  • Treats usage inside if typing.TYPE_CHECKING: as type-only.
  • Handles static sys.version_info checks
  • Skips from __future__ import ....
  • Requires exact module entries for nested imports.
  • Treats enclosing package names as non-lazy for a file. For example, in a/b/c.py, a and a.b should not be listed as lazy.

CLI

The project also provides a direct CLI runner:

flake8-lazy path/to/file.py another_file.py
# or
uvx flake8-lazy path/to/file.py another_file.py

The default output format matches flake8-style diagnostics:

$ flake8-lazy path/to/file.py
path/to/file.py:12:0: LZY102 module 'numpy' should be listed in __lazy_modules__

You can also ask for a copy-pasteable recommendation instead:

$ flake8-lazy --format lazy-modules path/to/file.py
path/to/file.py: __lazy_modules__ = ["numpy", "pandas"]

To rewrite files in place with the recommended declaration, use --apply:

flake8-lazy --apply=list path/to/file.py another_file.py

Available modes: list, set, native (3.15+ syntax), dynamic. Long list and set assignments are split one module per line with a trailing comma (black/ruff style) when they exceed --line-length (default 88), so the output needs no reformatting. When an __lazy_modules__ assignment already exists, its quote style (single or double) is preserved, so --apply stays a no-op once the module set is correct and does not fight a single-quote formatter; new assignments use double quotes. The command exits with status code 1 if any error is found.

Local development

See CONTRIBUTING.md for local development instructions.

FAQ

Why is this not in Ruff?

It's really new, and it's a bit complex. Maybe someday it will be? :)

It's missing something!

Open an issue! If it's clear and detailed and in-scope, I might even be able to assign it to copilot!

Acknowledgements

GitHub Copilot in VS Code was used to help develop this package. The Scientific Python Development Guide template was used as a starting point.

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