We are always happy to answer questions! Here are some good places to ask them:
- for anything you're curious about, try gitter chat
- for general questions about Python typing, try typing discussions
If you're just getting started, the documentation and type hints cheat sheet can also help answer questions.
If you think you've found a bug:
- check our common issues page
- search our issue tracker to see if it's already been reported
- consider asking on gitter chat
To report a bug or request an enhancement:
- report at our issue tracker
- if the issue is with a specific library or function, consider reporting it at typeshed tracker or the issue tracker for that library
To discuss a new type system feature:
- discuss at typing-sig mailing list
- there is also some historical discussion here
Mypy is a static type checker for Python.
Type checkers help ensure that you're using variables and functions in your code correctly. With mypy, add type hints (PEP 484) to your Python programs, and mypy will warn you when you use those types incorrectly.
Python is a dynamic language, so usually you'll only see errors in your code when you attempt to run it. Mypy is a static checker, so it finds bugs in your programs without even running them!
Mypy is designed with gradual typing in mind. This means you can add type hints to your code base slowly and that you can always fall back to dynamic typing when static typing is not convenient.
Here is a small example to whet your appetite:
number = input("What is your favourite number?")
print("Well, my favourite number is: ", number + 1) # error: Unsupported operand types for + ("str" and "int")
See the documentation for more examples.
In particular, see:
Mypy can be installed using pip:
$ python3 -m pip install -U mypy
If you want to run the latest version of the code, you can install from git:
$ python3 -m pip install -U git+git://github.com/python/mypy.git
Now you can type-check the statically typed parts of a program like this:
$ mypy PROGRAM
You can always use the Python interpreter to run your statically typed programs, even if mypy reports type errors:
$ python3 PROGRAM
You can also try mypy in an online playground (developed by Yusuke Miyazaki).
Mypy can be integrated into popular IDEs:
- Vim:
- Emacs: using Flycheck and Flycheck-mypy
- Sublime Text: SublimeLinter-contrib-mypy
- Atom: linter-mypy
- PyCharm: mypy plugin (PyCharm integrates its own implementation of PEP 484)
- VS Code: provides basic integration with mypy.
- pre-commit: use pre-commit mirrors-mypy.
Additional information is available at the web site:
Jump straight to the documentation:
Follow along our changelog at:
https://mypy-lang.blogspot.com/
Help in testing, development, documentation and other tasks is highly appreciated and useful to the project. There are tasks for contributors of all experience levels.
To get started with developing mypy, see CONTRIBUTING.md.
If you need help getting started, don't hesitate to ask on gitter.
Mypy is beta software, but it has already been used in production for several years at Dropbox and in many other organizations, and it has an extensive test suite.
Mypyc uses Python type hints to compile Python modules to faster C extensions. Mypy is itself compiled using mypyc: this makes mypy approximately 4 times faster than if interpreted!
To install an interpreted mypy instead, use:
$ python3 -m pip install --no-binary mypy -U mypy
To use a compiled version of a development version of mypy, directly install a binary from https://github.com/mypyc/mypy_mypyc-wheels/releases/latest.
To contribute to the mypyc project, check out https://github.com/mypyc/mypyc