A type enforcer for python type annotations
Project description
Type Enforced
Enforce types in python functions
Setup
Make sure you have Python 3.6.x (or higher) installed on your system. You can download it here.
Installation
pip install type_enforced
Getting Started
type_enforcer
contains a basic Enforcer
wrapper that can be used to enforce most basic python typing hints. Technical Docs Here.
type_enforcer
currently supports all single level python types, single level class instances and classes themselves. For example, you can force an input to be an int
or an instance of the self defined MyClass
, but not a vector of the format list(int)
. In this case, when using type_enforcer
, you would only pass the format list
and would not validate that the content of the list was indeed integers.
You can pass multiple types in brackets to validate one of multiple types. For example, you could validate an input was an int or a float with [int, float]
.
Non specified types for variables are not enforced.
Input and return typing are both supported.
Basic Usage
import type_enforced
@type_enforced.Enforcer
def my_fn(a: int , b: [int, str] =2, c: int =3) -> None:
pass
Interactive Example
>>> import type_enforced
>>> @type_enforced.Enforcer
... def my_fn(a: int , b: [int, str] =2, c: int =3) -> None:
... pass
...
>>> my_fn(a=1, b=2, c=3)
>>> my_fn(a=1, b='2', c=3)
>>> my_fn(a='a', b=2, c=3)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/home/conmak/development/personal/type_enforced/type_enforced/enforcer.py", line 85, in __call__
self.__check_type__(assigned_vars.get(key), value, key)
File "/home/conmak/development/personal/type_enforced/type_enforced/enforcer.py", line 107, in __check_type__
self.__exception__(
File "/home/conmak/development/personal/type_enforced/type_enforced/enforcer.py", line 34, in __exception__
raise Exception(f"({self.__fn__.__qualname__}): {message}")
Exception: (my_fn): Type mismatch for typed variable `a`. Expected one of the following `[<class 'int'>]` but got `<class 'str'>` instead.
Class and Method Use
Type enforcer can be applied to methods individually:
import type_enforced
class my_class:
@type_enforced.Enforcer
def my_fn(self, b:int):
pass
You can also enforce all typing for all methods in a class by decorating the class itself.
import type_enforced
@type_enforced.Enforcer
class my_class:
def my_fn(self, b:int):
pass
def my_other_fn(self, a: int, b: [int, str]):
pass
You can also enforce types on staticmethod
s and classmethod
s if you are using python >= 3.10
. If you are using a python version less than this, classmethod
s and staticmethod
s methods will not have their types enforced.
import type_enforced
@type_enforced.Enforcer
class my_class:
@classmethod
def my_fn(self, b:int):
pass
@staticmethod
def my_other_fn(a: int, b: [int, str]):
pass
Validate class instances and classes
Type enforcer can enforce class instances and classes easily. There are a few caveats between the two.
To enforce a class instance, simply pass the class itself as a type hint:
import type_enforced
class Foo():
def __init__(self) -> None:
pass
@type_enforced.Enforcer
class my_class():
def __init__(self, object: Foo) -> None:
self.object = object
x=my_class(Foo()) # Works great!
y=my_class(Foo) # Fails!
Notice how an initialized class instance Foo()
must be passed for the enforcer to not raise an exception.
To enforce an uninitialized class object use typing.Type[classHere]
on the class to enforce inputs to be an uninitialized class:
import type_enforced
import typing
class Foo():
def __init__(self) -> None:
pass
@type_enforced.Enforcer
class my_class():
def __init__(self, object_class: typing.Type[Foo]) -> None:
self.object = object_class()
y=my_class(Foo) # Works great!
x=my_class(Foo()) # Fails
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