Compound Statements - Python 3.12.3 Documentation
Compound Statements - Python 3.12.3 Documentation
3 documentation
8. Compound statements
Compound statements contain (groups of) other statements; they affect or control the execution of those other statements in some way. In general,
compound statements span multiple lines, although in simple incarnations a whole compound statement may be contained in one line.
The if , while and for statements implement traditional control flow constructs. try specifies exception handlers and/or cleanup code for a group
of statements, while the with statement allows the execution of initialization and finalization code around a block of code. Function and class
definitions are also syntactically compound statements.
A compound statement consists of one or more ‘clauses.’ A clause consists of a header and a ‘suite.’ The clause headers of a particular compound
statement are all at the same indentation level. Each clause header begins with a uniquely identifying keyword and ends with a colon. A suite is a
group of statements controlled by a clause. A suite can be one or more semicolon-separated simple statements on the same line as the header,
following the header’s colon, or it can be one or more indented statements on subsequent lines. Only the latter form of a suite can contain nested
compound statements; the following is illegal, mostly because it wouldn’t be clear to which if clause a following else clause would belong:
Also note that the semicolon binds tighter than the colon in this context, so that in the following example, either all or none of the print() calls are
executed:
Summarizing:
Note that statements always end in a NEWLINE possibly followed by a DEDENT . Also note that optional continuation clauses always begin with a
keyword that cannot start a statement, thus there are no ambiguities (the ‘dangling else ’ problem is solved in Python by requiring nested if
statements to be indented).
The formatting of the grammar rules in the following sections places each clause on a separate line for clarity.
It selects exactly one of the suites by evaluating the expressions one by one until one is found to be true (see section Boolean operations for the
definition of true and false); then that suite is executed (and no other part of the if statement is executed or evaluated). If all expressions are false,
the suite of the else clause, if present, is executed.
The while statement is used for repeated execution as long as an expression is true:
This repeatedly tests the expression and, if it is true, executes the first suite; if the expression is false (which may be the first time it is tested) the
suite of the else clause, if present, is executed and the loop terminates.
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A break statement executed in the first suite terminates the loop without executing the else clause’s suite. A continue statement executed in the
first suite skips3.12.3 Quick
the rest of the suite and goes backsearch
to testing the expression. Go
The for statement is used to iterate over the elements of a sequence (such as a string, tuple or list) or other iterable object:
The starred_list expression is evaluated once; it should yield an iterable object. An iterator is created for that iterable. The first item provided by
the iterator is then assigned to the target list using the standard rules for assignments (see Assignment statements), and the suite is executed. This
repeats for each item provided by the iterator. When the iterator is exhausted, the suite in the else clause, if present, is executed, and the loop
terminates.
A break statement executed in the first suite terminates the loop without executing the else clause’s suite. A continue statement executed in the
first suite skips the rest of the suite and continues with the next item, or with the else clause if there is no next item.
The for-loop makes assignments to the variables in the target list. This overwrites all previous assignments to those variables including those made
in the suite of the for-loop:
for i in range(10):
print(i)
i = 5 # this will not affect the for-loop
# because i will be overwritten with the next
# index in the range
Names in the target list are not deleted when the loop is finished, but if the sequence is empty, they will not have been assigned to at all by the
loop. Hint: the built-in type range() represents immutable arithmetic sequences of integers. For instance, iterating range(3) successively yields 0,
1, and then 2.
Changed in version 3.11: Starred elements are now allowed in the expression list.
The try statement specifies exception handlers and/or cleanup code for a group of statements:
Additional information on exceptions can be found in section Exceptions, and information on using the raise statement to generate exceptions
may be found in section The raise statement.
The except clause(s) specify one or more exception handlers. When no exception occurs in the try clause, no exception handler is executed. When
an exception occurs in the try suite, a search for an exception handler is started. This search inspects the except clauses in turn until one is found
that matches the exception. An expression-less except clause, if present, must be last; it matches any exception. For an except clause with an
expression, that expression is evaluated, and the clause matches the exception if the resulting object is “compatible” with the exception. An object is
compatible with an exception if the object is the class or a non-virtual base class of the exception object, or a tuple containing an item that is the
class or a non-virtual base class of the exception object.
If no except clause matches the exception, the search for an exception handler continues in the surrounding code and on the invocation stack. [1]
If the evaluation of an expression in the header of an except clause raises an exception, the original search for a handler is canceled and a search
starts for the new exception in the surrounding code and on the call stack (it is treated as if the entire try statement raised the exception).
When a matching except clause is found, the exception is assigned to the target specified after the as keyword in that except clause, if present,
and the except clause’s suite is executed. All except clauses must have an executable block. When the end of this block is reached, execution
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continues normally after the entire try statement. (This means that if two nested handlers exist for the same exception, and the exception occurs in
the try clause3.12.3 Quick
of the inner handler, the outer search
handler will not handle the exception.) Go
When an exception has been assigned using as target , it is cleared at the end of the except clause. This is as if
except E as N:
foo
was translated to
except E as N:
try:
foo
finally:
del N
This means the exception must be assigned to a different name to be able to refer to it after the except clause. Exceptions are cleared because with
the traceback attached to them, they form a reference cycle with the stack frame, keeping all locals in that frame alive until the next garbage
collection occurs.
Before an except clause’s suite is executed, the exception is stored in the sys module, where it can be accessed from within the body of the
except clause by calling sys.exception() . When leaving an exception handler, the exception stored in the sys module is reset to its previous
value:
The except* clause(s) are used for handling ExceptionGroup s. The exception type for matching is interpreted as in the case of except , but in the
case of exception groups we can have partial matches when the type matches some of the exceptions in the group. This means that multiple
except* clauses can execute, each handling part of the exception group. Each clause executes at most once and handles an exception group of all
matching exceptions. Each exception in the group is handled by at most one except* clause, the first that matches it.
Any remaining exceptions that were not handled by any except* clause are re-raised at the end, along with all exceptions that were raised from
within the except* clauses. If this list contains more than one exception to reraise, they are combined into an exception group.
If the raised exception is not an exception group and its type matches one of the except* clauses, it is caught and wrapped by an exception group
with an empty message string.
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... print(repr(e))
... 3.12.3 Quick search Go
ExceptionGroup('', (BlockingIOError()))
An except* clause must have a matching type, and this type cannot be a subclass of BaseExceptionGroup . It is not possible to mix except and
except* in the same try . break , continue and return cannot appear in an except* clause.
The optional else clause is executed if the control flow leaves the try suite, no exception was raised, and no return , continue , or break
statement was executed. Exceptions in the else clause are not handled by the preceding except clauses.
If finally is present, it specifies a ‘cleanup’ handler. The try clause is executed, including any except and else clauses. If an exception occurs in
any of the clauses and is not handled, the exception is temporarily saved. The finally clause is executed. If there is a saved exception it is re-raised
at the end of the finally clause. If the finally clause raises another exception, the saved exception is set as the context of the new exception. If
the finally clause executes a return , break or continue statement, the saved exception is discarded:
The exception information is not available to the program during execution of the finally clause.
When a return , break or continue statement is executed in the try suite of a try … finally statement, the finally clause is also executed ‘on
the way out.’
The return value of a function is determined by the last return statement executed. Since the finally clause always executes, a return statement
executed in the finally clause will always be the last one executed:
Changed in version 3.8: Prior to Python 3.8, a continue statement was illegal in the finally clause due to a problem with the
implementation.
The with statement is used to wrap the execution of a block with methods defined by a context manager (see section With Statement Context
Managers). This allows common try … except … finally usage patterns to be encapsulated for convenient reuse.
with_stmt ::= "with" ( "(" with_stmt_contents ","? ")" | with_stmt_contents ) ":" suite
with_stmt_contents ::= with_item ("," with_item )*
with_item ::= expression ["as" target ]
The execution of the with statement with one “item” proceeds as follows:
1. The context expression (the expression given in the with_item ) is evaluated to obtain a context manager.
5. If a target was included in the with statement, the return value from __enter__() is assigned to it.
Note: The with statement guarantees that if the __enter__() method returns without an error, then __exit__() will always be
called. Thus, if an error occurs during the assignment to the target list, it will be treated the same as an error occurring within the suite
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7. The context manager’s __exit__() method is invoked. If an exception caused the suite to be exited, its type, value, and traceback are
passed as arguments to __exit__() . Otherwise, three None arguments are supplied.
If the suite was exited due to an exception, and the return value from the __exit__() method was false, the exception is reraised. If the
return value was true, the exception is suppressed, and execution continues with the statement following the with statement.
If the suite was exited for any reason other than an exception, the return value from __exit__() is ignored, and execution proceeds at the
normal location for the kind of exit that was taken.
manager = (EXPRESSION)
enter = type(manager).__enter__
exit = type(manager).__exit__
value = enter(manager)
hit_except = False
try:
TARGET = value
SUITE
except:
hit_except = True
if not exit(manager, *sys.exc_info()):
raise
finally:
if not hit_except:
exit(manager, None, None, None)
With more than one item, the context managers are processed as if multiple with statements were nested:
with A() as a:
with B() as b:
SUITE
You can also write multi-item context managers in multiple lines if the items are surrounded by parentheses. For example:
with (
A() as a,
B() as b,
):
SUITE
Changed in version 3.10: Support for using grouping parentheses to break the statement in multiple lines.
See also:
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Pattern matching takes a pattern as input (following case ) and a subject value (following match ). The pattern (which may contain subpatterns) is
matched against the subject value. The outcomes are:
See also:
8.6.1. Overview
1. The subject expression subject_expr is evaluated and a resulting subject value obtained. If the subject expression contains a comma, a
tuple is constructed using the standard rules.
2. Each pattern in a case_block is attempted to match with the subject value. The specific rules for success or failure are described below.
The match attempt can also bind some or all of the standalone names within the pattern. The precise pattern binding rules vary per pattern
type and are specified below. Name bindings made during a successful pattern match outlive the executed block and can be used
after the match statement.
Note: During failed pattern matches, some subpatterns may succeed. Do not rely on bindings being made for a failed match.
Conversely, do not rely on variables remaining unchanged after a failed match. The exact behavior is dependent on implementation and
may vary. This is an intentional decision made to allow different implementations to add optimizations.
3. If the pattern succeeds, the corresponding guard (if present) is evaluated. In this case all name bindings are guaranteed to have happened.
If the guard evaluates as true or is missing, the block inside case_block is executed.
Otherwise, the next case_block is attempted as described above.
If there are no further case blocks, the match statement is completed.
Note: Users should generally never rely on a pattern being evaluated. Depending on implementation, the interpreter may cache values or use
other optimizations which skip repeated evaluations.
In this case, if flag is a guard. Read more about that in the next section.
8.6.2. Guards
A guard (which is part of the case ) must succeed for code inside the case block to execute. It takes the form: if followed by an expression.
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Guards are allowed to have side effects as they are expressions. Guard evaluation must proceed from the first to the last case block, one at a time,
skipping case blocks whose pattern(s) don’t all succeed. (I.e., guard evaluation must happen in order.) Guard evaluation must stop once a case block
is selected.
An irrefutable case block is a match-all case block. A match statement may have at most one irrefutable case block, and it must be last.
A case block is considered irrefutable if it has no guard and its pattern is irrefutable. A pattern is considered irrefutable if we can prove from its
syntax alone that it will always succeed. Only the following patterns are irrefutable:
8.6.4. Patterns
The descriptions below will include a description “in simple terms” of what a pattern does for illustration purposes (credits to Raymond Hettinger for
a document that inspired most of the descriptions). Note that these descriptions are purely for illustration purposes and may not reflect the
underlying implementation. Furthermore, they do not cover all valid forms.
8.6.4.1. OR Patterns
Only the final subpattern may be irrefutable, and each subpattern must bind the same set of names to avoid ambiguity.
An OR pattern matches each of its subpatterns in turn to the subject value, until one succeeds. The OR pattern is then considered successful.
Otherwise, if none of the subpatterns succeed, the OR pattern fails.
In simple terms, P1 | P2 | ... will try to match P1 , if it fails it will try to match P2 , succeeding immediately if any succeeds, failing otherwise.
8.6.4.2. AS Patterns
An AS pattern matches an OR pattern on the left of the as keyword against a subject. Syntax:
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If the OR pattern fails, the AS pattern fails. Otherwise, the AS pattern binds the subject to the name on the right of the as keyword and succeeds.
3.12.3
capture_pattern cannot be a _ . Quick search Go
In simple terms P as NAME will match with P , and on success it will set NAME = <subject> .
The rule strings and the token NUMBER are defined in the standard Python grammar. Triple-quoted strings are supported. Raw strings and byte
strings are supported. f-strings are not supported.
The forms signed_number '+' NUMBER and signed_number '-' NUMBER are for expressing complex numbers; they require a real number on the
left and an imaginary number on the right. E.g. 3 + 4j .
In simple terms, LITERAL will succeed only if <subject> == LITERAL . For the singletons None , True and False , the is operator is used.
A single underscore _ is not a capture pattern (this is what !'_' expresses). It is instead treated as a wildcard_pattern .
In a given pattern, a given name can only be bound once. E.g. case x, x: ... is invalid while case [x] | x: ... is allowed.
Capture patterns always succeed. The binding follows scoping rules established by the assignment expression operator in PEP 572; the name
becomes a local variable in the closest containing function scope unless there’s an applicable global or nonlocal statement.
In simple terms NAME will always succeed and it will set NAME = <subject> .
A wildcard pattern always succeeds (matches anything) and binds no name. Syntax:
_ is a soft keyword within any pattern, but only within patterns. It is an identifier, as usual, even within match subject expressions, guard s, and case
blocks.
The dotted name in the pattern is looked up using standard Python name resolution rules. The pattern succeeds if the value found compares equal
to the subject value (using the == equality operator).
Note: If the same value occurs multiple times in the same match statement, the interpreter may cache the first value found and reuse it rather
than repeat the same lookup. This cache is strictly tied to a given execution of a given match statement.
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A group pattern allows users to add parentheses around patterns to emphasize the intended grouping. Otherwise, it has no additional syntax.
Syntax: 3.12.3 Quick search Go
A sequence pattern contains several subpatterns to be matched against sequence elements. The syntax is similar to the unpacking of a list or tuple.
There is no difference if parentheses or square brackets are used for sequence patterns (i.e. (...) vs [...] ).
Note: A single pattern enclosed in parentheses without a trailing comma (e.g. (3 | 4) ) is a group pattern. While a single pattern enclosed in
square brackets (e.g. [3 | 4] ) is still a sequence pattern.
At most one star subpattern may be in a sequence pattern. The star subpattern may occur in any position. If no star subpattern is present, the
sequence pattern is a fixed-length sequence pattern; otherwise it is a variable-length sequence pattern.
The following is the logical flow for matching a sequence pattern against a subject value:
1. If the subject value is not a sequence [2], the sequence pattern fails.
2. If the subject value is an instance of str , bytes or bytearray the sequence pattern fails.
3. The subsequent steps depend on whether the sequence pattern is fixed or variable-length.
1. If the length of the subject sequence is not equal to the number of subpatterns, the sequence pattern fails
2. Subpatterns in the sequence pattern are matched to their corresponding items in the subject sequence from left to right. Matching
stops as soon as a subpattern fails. If all subpatterns succeed in matching their corresponding item, the sequence pattern
succeeds.
1. If the length of the subject sequence is less than the number of non-star subpatterns, the sequence pattern fails.
2. The leading non-star subpatterns are matched to their corresponding items as for fixed-length sequences.
3. If the previous step succeeds, the star subpattern matches a list formed of the remaining subject items, excluding the remaining
items corresponding to non-star subpatterns following the star subpattern.
4. Remaining non-star subpatterns are matched to their corresponding subject items, as for a fixed-length sequence.
Note: The length of the subject sequence is obtained via len() (i.e. via the __len__() protocol). This length may be cached by the
interpreter in a similar manner as value patterns.
In simple terms [P1, P2, P3, … , P<N>] matches only if all the following happens:
A mapping pattern contains one or more key-value patterns. The syntax is similar to the construction of a dictionary. Syntax:
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At most one double star pattern may be in a mapping pattern. The double star pattern must be the last subpattern in the mapping pattern.
3.12.3 Quick search Go
Duplicate keys in mapping patterns are disallowed. Duplicate literal keys will raise a SyntaxError . Two keys that otherwise have the same value will
raise a ValueError at runtime.
The following is the logical flow for matching a mapping pattern against a subject value:
Note: Key-value pairs are matched using the two-argument form of the mapping subject’s get() method. Matched key-value pairs must
already be present in the mapping, and not created on-the-fly via __missing__() or __getitem__() .
In simple terms {KEY1: P1, KEY2: P2, ... } matches only if all the following happens:
A class pattern represents a class and its positional and keyword arguments (if any). Syntax:
The following is the logical flow for matching a class pattern against a subject value:
2. If the subject value is not an instance of name_or_attr (tested via isinstance() ), the class pattern fails.
3. If no pattern arguments are present, the pattern succeeds. Otherwise, the subsequent steps depend on whether keyword or positional
argument patterns are present.
For a number of built-in types (specified below), a single positional subpattern is accepted which will match the entire subject; for these
types keyword patterns also work as for other types.
If only keyword patterns are present, they are processed as follows, one by one:
If this raises an exception other than AttributeError , the exception bubbles up.
If this raises AttributeError , the class pattern has failed.
Else, the subpattern associated with the keyword pattern is matched against the subject’s attribute value. If this fails, the class pattern
fails; if this succeeds, the match proceeds to the next keyword.
If any positional patterns are present, they are converted to keyword patterns using the __match_args__ attribute on the class
name_or_attr before matching:
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II. Once all positional patterns have been converted to keyword patterns,
the match proceeds as if there were only keyword patterns.
For the following built-in types the handling of positional subpatterns is different:
bool
bytearray
bytes
dict
float
frozenset
int
list
set
str
tuple
These classes accept a single positional argument, and the pattern there is matched against the whole object rather than an attribute. For
example int(0|1) matches the value 0 , but not the value 0.0 .
isinstance(<subject>, CLS)
convert P1 to a keyword pattern using CLS.__match_args__
For each keyword argument attr=P2 :
hasattr(<subject>, "attr")
P2 matches <subject>.attr
… and so on for the corresponding keyword argument/pattern pair.
See also:
A function definition defines a user-defined function object (see section The standard type hierarchy):
A function definition is an executable statement. Its execution binds the function name in the current local namespace to a function object (a
wrapper around the executable code for the function). This function object contains a reference to the current global namespace as the global
namespace to be used when the function is called.
The function definition does not execute the function body; this gets executed only when the function is called. [4]
A function definition may be wrapped by one or more decorator expressions. Decorator expressions are evaluated when the function is defined, in
the scope that contains the function definition. The result must be a callable, which is invoked with the function object as the only argument. The
returned value is bound to the function name instead of the function object. Multiple decorators are applied in nested fashion. For example, the
following code
@f1(arg)
@f2
def func(): pass
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3.12.3to
is roughly equivalent Quick search Go
except that the original function is not temporarily bound to the name func .
Changed in version 3.9: Functions may be decorated with any valid assignment_expression . Previously, the grammar was much more
restrictive; see PEP 614 for details.
A list of type parameters may be given in square brackets between the function’s name and the opening parenthesis for its parameter list. This
indicates to static type checkers that the function is generic. At runtime, the type parameters can be retrieved from the function’s __type_params__
attribute. See Generic functions for more.
Changed in version 3.12: Type parameter lists are new in Python 3.12.
When one or more parameters have the form parameter = expression, the function is said to have “default parameter values.” For a parameter with a
default value, the corresponding argument may be omitted from a call, in which case the parameter’s default value is substituted. If a parameter has
a default value, all following parameters up until the “ * ” must also have a default value — this is a syntactic restriction that is not expressed by the
grammar.
Default parameter values are evaluated from left to right when the function definition is executed. This means that the expression is
evaluated once, when the function is defined, and that the same “pre-computed” value is used for each call. This is especially important to
understand when a default parameter value is a mutable object, such as a list or a dictionary: if the function modifies the object (e.g. by appending
an item to a list), the default parameter value is in effect modified. This is generally not what was intended. A way around this is to use None as the
default, and explicitly test for it in the body of the function, e.g.:
def whats_on_the_telly(penguin=None):
if penguin is None:
penguin = []
penguin.append("property of the zoo")
return penguin
Function call semantics are described in more detail in section Calls. A function call always assigns values to all parameters mentioned in the
parameter list, either from positional arguments, from keyword arguments, or from default values. If the form “ *identifier ” is present, it is
initialized to a tuple receiving any excess positional parameters, defaulting to the empty tuple. If the form “ **identifier ” is present, it is initialized
to a new ordered mapping receiving any excess keyword arguments, defaulting to a new empty mapping of the same type. Parameters after “ * ” or
“ *identifier ” are keyword-only parameters and may only be passed by keyword arguments. Parameters before “ / ” are positional-only
parameters and may only be passed by positional arguments.
Changed in version 3.8: The / function parameter syntax may be used to indicate positional-only parameters. See PEP 570 for details.
Parameters may have an annotation of the form “ : expression ” following the parameter name. Any parameter may have an annotation, even
those of the form *identifier or **identifier . Functions may have “return” annotation of the form “ -> expression ” after the parameter list.
These annotations can be any valid Python expression. The presence of annotations does not change the semantics of a function. The annotation
values are available as values of a dictionary keyed by the parameters’ names in the __annotations__ attribute of the function object. If the
annotations import from __future__ is used, annotations are preserved as strings at runtime which enables postponed evaluation. Otherwise,
they are evaluated when the function definition is executed. In this case annotations may be evaluated in a different order than they appear in the
source code.
It is also possible to create anonymous functions (functions not bound to a name), for immediate use in expressions. This uses lambda expressions,
described in section Lambdas. Note that the lambda expression is merely a shorthand for a simplified function definition; a function defined in a
“ def ” statement can be passed around or assigned to another name just like a function defined by a lambda expression. The “ def ” form is actually
more powerful since it allows the execution of multiple statements and annotations.
Programmer’s note: Functions are first-class objects. A “ def ” statement executed inside a function definition defines a local function that can be
returned or passed around. Free variables used in the nested function can access the local variables of the function containing the def. See section
Naming and binding for details.
See also:
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Ability to type hint variable declarations, including class variables and instance variables.
3.12.3 Quick search Go
PEP 563 - Postponed Evaluation of Annotations
Support for forward references within annotations by preserving annotations in a string form at runtime instead of eager evaluation.
A class definition defines a class object (see section The standard type hierarchy):
A class definition is an executable statement. The inheritance list usually gives a list of base classes (see Metaclasses for more advanced uses), so
each item in the list should evaluate to a class object which allows subclassing. Classes without an inheritance list inherit, by default, from the base
class object ; hence,
class Foo:
pass
is equivalent to
class Foo(object):
pass
The class’s suite is then executed in a new execution frame (see Naming and binding), using a newly created local namespace and the original
global namespace. (Usually, the suite contains mostly function definitions.) When the class’s suite finishes execution, its execution frame is discarded
but its local namespace is saved. [5] A class object is then created using the inheritance list for the base classes and the saved local namespace for
the attribute dictionary. The class name is bound to this class object in the original local namespace.
The order in which attributes are defined in the class body is preserved in the new class’s __dict__ . Note that this is reliable only right after the
class is created and only for classes that were defined using the definition syntax.
@f1(arg)
@f2
class Foo: pass
is roughly equivalent to
The evaluation rules for the decorator expressions are the same as for function decorators. The result is then bound to the class name.
Changed in version 3.9: Classes may be decorated with any valid assignment_expression . Previously, the grammar was much more
restrictive; see PEP 614 for details.
A list of type parameters may be given in square brackets immediately after the class’s name. This indicates to static type checkers that the class is
generic. At runtime, the type parameters can be retrieved from the class’s __type_params__ attribute. See Generic classes for more.
Changed in version 3.12: Type parameter lists are new in Python 3.12.
Programmer’s note: Variables defined in the class definition are class attributes; they are shared by instances. Instance attributes can be set in a
method with self.name = value . Both class and instance attributes are accessible through the notation “ self.name ”, and an instance attribute
hides a class attribute with the same name when accessed in this way. Class attributes can be used as defaults for instance attributes, but using
mutable values there can lead to unexpected results. Descriptors can be used to create instance variables with different implementation details.
See also:
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PEP 3129 - Class Decorators
3.12.3that added class decorators.
The proposal Quick search
Function and method decorators were introduced in PEP 318. Go
8.9. Coroutines
Execution of Python coroutines can be suspended and resumed at many points (see coroutine). await expressions, async for and async with
can only be used in the body of a coroutine function.
Functions defined with async def syntax are always coroutine functions, even if they do not contain await or async keywords.
It is a SyntaxError to use a yield from expression inside the body of a coroutine function.
Changed in version 3.7: await and async are now keywords; previously they were only treated as such inside the body of a coroutine
function.
An asynchronous iterable provides an __aiter__ method that directly returns an asynchronous iterator, which can call asynchronous code in its
__anext__ method.
The async for statement allows convenient iteration over asynchronous iterables.
iter = (ITER)
iter = type(iter).__aiter__(iter)
running = True
while running:
try:
TARGET = await type(iter).__anext__(iter)
except StopAsyncIteration:
running = False
else:
SUITE
else:
SUITE2
It is a SyntaxError to use an async for statement outside the body of a coroutine function.
An asynchronous context manager is a context manager that is able to suspend execution in its enter and exit methods.
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manager = (EXPRESSION)
aenter = type(manager).__aenter__
aexit = type(manager).__aexit__
value = await aenter(manager)
hit_except = False
try:
TARGET = value
SUITE
except:
hit_except = True
if not await aexit(manager, *sys.exc_info()):
raise
finally:
if not hit_except:
await aexit(manager, None, None, None)
It is a SyntaxError to use an async with statement outside the body of a coroutine function.
See also:
Functions (including coroutines), classes and type aliases may contain a type parameter list:
class Bag[T]:
def __iter__(self) -> Iterator[T]:
...
Semantically, this indicates that the function, class, or type alias is generic over a type variable. This information is primarily used by static type
checkers, and at runtime, generic objects behave much like their non-generic counterparts.
Type parameters are declared in square brackets ( [] ) immediately after the name of the function, class, or type alias. The type parameters are
accessible within the scope of the generic object, but not elsewhere. Thus, after a declaration def func[T](): pass , the name T is not available in
the module scope. Below, the semantics of generic objects are described with more precision. The scope of type parameters is modeled with a
special function (technically, an annotation scope) that wraps the creation of the generic object.
Generic functions, classes, and type aliases have a __type_params__ attribute listing their type parameters.
typing.TypeVar , introduced by a plain name (e.g., T ). Semantically, this represents a single type to a type checker.
typing.TypeVarTuple , introduced by a name prefixed with a single asterisk (e.g., *Ts ). Semantically, this stands for a tuple of any number of
types.
typing.ParamSpec , introduced by a name prefixed with two asterisks (e.g., **P ). Semantically, this stands for the parameters of a callable.
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typing.TypeVar declarations can define bounds and constraints with a colon ( : ) followed by an expression. A single expression after the colon
3.12.3
indicates a bound Quick
(e.g. T: int ). Semantically, thissearch
means that the typing.TypeVar can only represent types that are a subtype of this bound. A Go
parenthesized tuple of expressions after the colon indicates a set of constraints (e.g. T: (str, bytes) ). Each member of the tuple should be a type
(again, this is not enforced at runtime). Constrained type variables can only take on one of the types in the list of constraints.
For typing.TypeVar s declared using the type parameter list syntax, the bound and constraints are not evaluated when the generic object is
created, but only when the value is explicitly accessed through the attributes __bound__ and __constraints__ . To accomplish this, the bounds or
constraints are evaluated in a separate annotation scope.
The following example indicates the full set of allowed type parameter declarations:
def overly_generic[
SimpleTypeVar,
TypeVarWithBound: int,
TypeVarWithConstraints: (str, bytes),
*SimpleTypeVarTuple,
**SimpleParamSpec,
](
a: SimpleTypeVar,
b: TypeVarWithBound,
c: Callable[SimpleParamSpec, TypeVarWithConstraints],
*d: SimpleTypeVarTuple,
): ...
annotation-def TYPE_PARAMS_OF_func():
T = typing.TypeVar("T")
def func(arg: T): ...
func.__type_params__ = (T,)
return func
func = TYPE_PARAMS_OF_func()
Here annotation-def indicates an annotation scope, which is not actually bound to any name at runtime. (One other liberty is taken in the
translation: the syntax does not go through attribute access on the typing module, but creates an instance of typing.TypeVar directly.)
The annotations of generic functions are evaluated within the annotation scope used for declaring the type parameters, but the function’s defaults
and decorators are not.
The following example illustrates the scoping rules for these cases, as well as for additional flavors of type parameters:
@decorator
def func[T: int, *Ts, **P](*args: *Ts, arg: Callable[P, T] = some_default):
...
Except for the lazy evaluation of the TypeVar bound, this is equivalent to:
DEFAULT_OF_arg = some_default
annotation-def TYPE_PARAMS_OF_func():
annotation-def BOUND_OF_T():
return int
# In reality, BOUND_OF_T() is evaluated only on demand.
T = typing.TypeVar("T", bound=BOUND_OF_T())
Ts = typing.TypeVarTuple("Ts")
P = typing.ParamSpec("P")
The capitalized names like DEFAULT_OF_arg are not actually bound at runtime.
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annotation-def TYPE_PARAMS_OF_Bag():
T = typing.TypeVar("T")
class Bag(typing.Generic[T]):
__type_params__ = (T,)
...
return Bag
Bag = TYPE_PARAMS_OF_Bag()
Here again annotation-def (not a real keyword) indicates an annotation scope, and the name TYPE_PARAMS_OF_Bag is not actually bound at
runtime.
Generic classes implicitly inherit from typing.Generic . The base classes and keyword arguments of generic classes are evaluated within the type
scope for the type parameters, and decorators are evaluated outside that scope. This is illustrated by this example:
@decorator
class Bag(Base[T], arg=T): ...
annotation-def TYPE_PARAMS_OF_Bag():
T = typing.TypeVar("T")
class Bag(Base[T], typing.Generic[T], arg=T):
__type_params__ = (T,)
...
return Bag
Bag = decorator(TYPE_PARAMS_OF_Bag())
The type statement can also be used to create a generic type alias:
Except for the lazy evaluation of the value, this is equivalent to:
annotation-def TYPE_PARAMS_OF_ListOrSet():
T = typing.TypeVar("T")
annotation-def VALUE_OF_ListOrSet():
return list[T] | set[T]
# In reality, the value is lazily evaluated
return typing.TypeAliasType("ListOrSet", VALUE_OF_ListOrSet(), type_params=(T,))
ListOrSet = TYPE_PARAMS_OF_ListOrSet()
Here, annotation-def (not a real keyword) indicates an annotation scope. The capitalized names like TYPE_PARAMS_OF_ListOrSet are not actually
bound at runtime.
Footnotes
[1] The exception is propagated to the invocation stack unless there is a finally clause which happens to raise another exception. That new
exception causes the old one to be lost.
array.array
collections.deque
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list
memoryview3.12.3 Quick search Go
range
tuple
Note: Subject values of type str , bytes , and bytearray do not match sequence patterns.
[4] A string literal appearing as the first statement in the function body is transformed into the function’s __doc__ attribute and therefore the
function’s docstring.
[5] A string literal appearing as the first statement in the class body is transformed into the namespace’s __doc__ item and therefore the class’s
docstring.
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