future-annotations
A backport of __future__ annotations to python<3.7.
Installation
pip install future-annotations
Usage
Include the following encoding cookie at the top of your file (this replaces
the utf-8 cookie if you already have it):
And then write python3.7+ forward-annotation code as usual!
class C:
@classmethod
def make(cls) -> C:
return cls()
print(C.make())
$ python3.6 main.py
<__main__.C object at 0x7fb50825dd90>
$ mypy main.py
Success: no issues found in 1 source file
Showing transformed source
future-annotations
also includes a cli to show transformed source.
$ future-annotations-show main.py
# ****************************** -*-
class C:
@classmethod
def make(cls) -> 'C':
return cls()
print(C.make())
How does this work?
future-annotations
has two parts:
- A utf-8 compatible
codec
which performs source manipulation
- The
codec
first decodes the source bytes using the UTF-8 codec - The
codec
then leverages
tokenize-rt to rewrite
annotations.
- A
.pth
file which registers a codec on interpreter startup.
when you aren't using normal site
registration
in setups (such as aws lambda) where you utilize PYTHONPATH
or sys.path
instead of truly installed packages, the .pth
magic above will not take.
for those circumstances, you'll need to manually initialize future-annotations
in a non-annotations wrapper. for instance:
import future_annotations
future_annotations.register()
from actual_main import main
if __name__ == '__main__':
exit(main())
you may also like