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MYPY(1) Mypy MYPY(1)

NAME

mypy - Optional static typing for Python

SYNOPSIS

mypy [-h] [-v] [-V] [-m MODULE] [-p PACKAGE] [-c PROGRAM_TEXT] [OPTIONS...] [FILES ...]

DESCRIPTION

Mypy is a static type checker for Python 3 and Python 2.7. If you sprinkle your code with type annotations, mypy can type check your code and find common bugs. As mypy is a static analyzer, or a lint-like tool, the type annotations are just hints for mypy and don’t interfere when running your program. You run your program with a standard Python interpreter, and the annotations are treated effectively as comments.

Using the Python 3 function annotation syntax (using the PEP 484 notation) or a comment-based annotation syntax for Python 2 code, you will be able to efficiently annotate your code and use mypy to check the code for common errors. Mypy has a powerful and easy-to-use type system with modern features such as type inference, generics, callable types, tuple types, union types, and structural subtyping.

Mypy is invoked with the paths the user needs to check:

$ mypy foo.py bar.py some_directory


The directories are checked recursively to find Python source files.

OPTIONS

This section documents mypy's command line interface. You can view a quick summary of the available flags by running mypy --help.

NOTE:

Command line flags are liable to change between releases.


Specifying what to type check

By default, you can specify what code you want mypy to type check by passing in the paths to what you want to have type checked:

$ mypy foo.py bar.py some_directory


Note that directories are checked recursively.

Mypy also lets you specify what code to type check in several other ways. A short summary of the relevant flags is included below: for full details, see running-mypy.

Asks mypy to type check the provided module. This flag may be repeated multiple times.

Mypy will not recursively type check any submodules of the provided module.


Asks mypy to type check the provided package. This flag may be repeated multiple times.

Mypy will recursively type check any submodules of the provided package. This flag is identical to --module apart from this behavior.


Asks mypy to type check the provided string as a program.

A regular expression that matches file names, directory names and paths which mypy should ignore while recursively discovering files to check. Use forward slashes on all platforms.

For instance, to avoid discovering any files named setup.py you could pass --exclude '/setup\.py$'. Similarly, you can ignore discovering directories with a given name by e.g. --exclude /build/ or those matching a subpath with --exclude /project/vendor/.

Note that this flag only affects recursive discovery, that is, when mypy is discovering files within a directory tree or submodules of a package to check. If you pass a file or module explicitly it will still be checked. For instance, mypy --exclude '/setup.py$' but_still_check/setup.py.

Note that mypy will never recursively discover files and directories named "site-packages", "node_modules" or "__pycache__", or those whose name starts with a period, exactly as --exclude '/(site-packages|node_modules|__pycache__|\..*)/$' would. Mypy will also never recursively discover files with extensions other than .py or .pyi.


Optional arguments

Show help message and exit.

More verbose messages.

Show program's version number and exit.

Config file

This flag makes mypy read configuration settings from the given file.

By default settings are read from mypy.ini, .mypy.ini, or setup.cfg in the current directory. Settings override mypy's built-in defaults and command line flags can override settings.

Specifying --config-file= (with no filename) will ignore all config files.

See config-file for the syntax of configuration files.


This flag makes mypy warn about unused [mypy-<pattern>] config file sections. (This requires turning off incremental mode using --no-incremental.)

Import discovery

The following flags customize how exactly mypy discovers and follows imports.

This flag enables import discovery to use namespace packages (see PEP 420). In particular, this allows discovery of imported packages that don't have an __init__.py (or __init__.pyi) file.

Namespace packages are found (using the PEP 420 rules, which prefers "classic" packages over namespace packages) along the module search path -- this is primarily set from the source files passed on the command line, the MYPYPATH environment variable, and the

:confval:`mypy_path`

config option.

This flag affects how mypy finds modules and packages explicitly passed on the command line. It also affects how mypy determines fully qualified module names for files passed on the command line. See Mapping file paths to modules for details.


This flag tells mypy that top-level packages will be based in either the current directory, or a member of the MYPYPATH environment variable or

:confval:`mypy_path`

config option. This option is only useful in conjunction with --namespace-packages. See Mapping file paths to modules for details.

This flag makes mypy ignore all missing imports. It is equivalent to adding # type: ignore comments to all unresolved imports within your codebase.

Note that this flag does not suppress errors about missing names in successfully resolved modules. For example, if one has the following files:

package/__init__.py
package/mod.py


Then mypy will generate the following errors with --ignore-missing-imports:

import package.unknown      # No error, ignored
x = package.unknown.func()  # OK. 'func' is assumed to be of type 'Any'
from package import unknown          # No error, ignored
from package.mod import NonExisting  # Error: Module has no attribute 'NonExisting'


For more details, see ignore-missing-imports.


This flag adjusts how mypy follows imported modules that were not explicitly passed in via the command line.

The default option is normal: mypy will follow and type check all modules. For more information on what the other options do, see Following imports.


This flag will have mypy collect type information from PEP 561 compliant packages installed for the Python executable EXECUTABLE. If not provided, mypy will use PEP 561 compliant packages installed for the Python executable running mypy.

See installed-packages for more on making PEP 561 compliant packages.


This flag will disable searching for PEP 561 compliant packages. This will also disable searching for a usable Python executable.

Use this flag if mypy cannot find a Python executable for the version of Python being checked, and you don't need to use PEP 561 typed packages. Otherwise, use --python-executable.


By default, mypy will suppress any error messages generated within PEP 561 compliant packages. Adding this flag will disable this behavior.

Platform configuration

By default, mypy will assume that you intend to run your code using the same operating system and Python version you are using to run mypy itself. The following flags let you modify this behavior.

For more information on how to use these flags, see version_and_platform_checks.

This flag will make mypy type check your code as if it were run under Python version X.Y. Without this option, mypy will default to using whatever version of Python is running mypy. Note that the -2 and --py2 flags are aliases for --python-version 2.7.

This flag will attempt to find a Python executable of the corresponding version to search for PEP 561 compliant packages. If you'd like to disable this, use the --no-site-packages flag (see import-discovery for more details).


-2, --py2
Equivalent to running --python-version 2.7.

This flag will make mypy type check your code as if it were run under the given operating system. Without this option, mypy will default to using whatever operating system you are currently using.

The PLATFORM parameter may be any string supported by sys.platform.


This flag will treat all variables named NAME as compile-time constants that are always true. This flag may be repeated.

This flag will treat all variables named NAME as compile-time constants that are always false. This flag may be repeated.

Disallow dynamic typing

The Any type is used represent a value that has a dynamic type. The --disallow-any family of flags will disallow various uses of the Any type in a module -- this lets us strategically disallow the use of dynamic typing in a controlled way.

The following options are available:

This flag disallows usage of types that come from unfollowed imports (such types become aliases for Any). Unfollowed imports occur either when the imported module does not exist or when --follow-imports=skip is set.

This flag disallows all expressions in the module that have type Any. If an expression of type Any appears anywhere in the module mypy will output an error unless the expression is immediately used as an argument to cast() or assigned to a variable with an explicit type annotation.

In addition, declaring a variable of type Any or casting to type Any is not allowed. Note that calling functions that take parameters of type Any is still allowed.


This flag disallows functions that have Any in their signature after decorator transformation.

This flag disallows explicit Any in type positions such as type annotations and generic type parameters.

This flag disallows usage of generic types that do not specify explicit type parameters. Moreover, built-in collections (such as list and dict) become disallowed as you should use their aliases from the typing module (such as List[int] and Dict[str, str]).

This flag reports an error whenever a class subclasses a value of type Any. This may occur when the base class is imported from a module that doesn't exist (when using --ignore-missing-imports) or is ignored due to --follow-imports=skip or a # type: ignore comment on the import statement.

Since the module is silenced, the imported class is given a type of Any. By default mypy will assume that the subclass correctly inherited the base class even though that may not actually be the case. This flag makes mypy raise an error instead.


Untyped definitions and calls

The following flags configure how mypy handles untyped function definitions or calls.

This flag reports an error whenever a function with type annotations calls a function defined without annotations.

This flag reports an error whenever it encounters a function definition without type annotations.

This flag reports an error whenever it encounters a partly annotated function definition.

This flag is less severe than the previous two options -- it type checks the body of every function, regardless of whether it has type annotations. (By default the bodies of functions without annotations are not type checked.)

It will assume all arguments have type Any and always infer Any as the return type.


This flag reports an error whenever a function with type annotations is decorated with a decorator without annotations.

None and Optional handling

The following flags adjust how mypy handles values of type None. For more details, see no_strict_optional.

This flag causes mypy to stop treating arguments with a None default value as having an implicit Optional type.

For example, by default mypy will assume that the x parameter is of type Optional[int] in the code snippet below since the default parameter is None:

def foo(x: int = None) -> None:

print(x)


If this flag is set, the above snippet will no longer type check: we must now explicitly indicate that the type is Optional[int]:

def foo(x: Optional[int] = None) -> None:

print(x)



This flag disables strict checking of Optional types and None values. With this option, mypy doesn't generally check the use of None values -- they are valid everywhere. See no_strict_optional for more about this feature.

Note: Strict optional checking was enabled by default starting in mypy 0.600, and in previous versions it had to be explicitly enabled using --strict-optional (which is still accepted).


Configuring warnings

The follow flags enable warnings for code that is sound but is potentially problematic or redundant in some way.

This flag will make mypy report an error whenever your code uses an unnecessary cast that can safely be removed.

This flag will make mypy report an error whenever your code uses a # type: ignore comment on a line that is not actually generating an error message.

This flag, along with the --warn-redundant-casts flag, are both particularly useful when you are upgrading mypy. Previously, you may have needed to add casts or # type: ignore annotations to work around bugs in mypy or missing stubs for 3rd party libraries.

These two flags let you discover cases where either workarounds are no longer necessary.


By default, mypy will generate errors when a function is missing return statements in some execution paths. The only exceptions are when:
  • The function has a None or Any return type
  • The function has an empty body or a body that is just ellipsis (...). Empty functions are often used for abstract methods.

Passing in --no-warn-no-return will disable these error messages in all cases.


This flag causes mypy to generate a warning when returning a value with type Any from a function declared with a non-Any return type.

This flag will make mypy report an error whenever it encounters code determined to be unreachable or redundant after performing type analysis. This can be a helpful way of detecting certain kinds of bugs in your code.

For example, enabling this flag will make mypy report that the x > 7 check is redundant and that the else block below is unreachable.

def process(x: int) -> None:

# Error: Right operand of 'or' is never evaluated
if isinstance(x, int) or x > 7:
# Error: Unsupported operand types for + ("int" and "str")
print(x + "bad")
else:
# Error: 'Statement is unreachable' error
print(x + "bad")


To help prevent mypy from generating spurious warnings, the "Statement is unreachable" warning will be silenced in exactly two cases:

1.
When the unreachable statement is a raise statement, is an assert False statement, or calls a function that has the NoReturn return type hint. In other words, when the unreachable statement throws an error or terminates the program in some way.
2.
When the unreachable statement was intentionally marked as unreachable using version_and_platform_checks.

NOTE:

Mypy currently cannot detect and report unreachable or redundant code inside any functions using type-variable-value-restriction.

This limitation will be removed in future releases of mypy.




Miscellaneous strictness flags

This section documents any other flags that do not neatly fall under any of the above sections.

This flag causes mypy to suppress errors caused by not being able to fully infer the types of global and class variables.

By default, mypy won't allow a variable to be redefined with an unrelated type. This flag enables redefinition of a variable with an arbitrary type in some contexts: only redefinitions within the same block and nesting depth as the original definition are allowed. Example where this can be useful:

def process(items: List[str]) -> None:

# 'items' has type List[str]
items = [item.split() for item in items]
# 'items' now has type List[List[str]]
...



In mypy, the most common cases for partial types are variables initialized using None, but without explicit Optional annotations. By default, mypy won't check partial types spanning module top level or class top level. This flag changes the behavior to only allow partial types at local level, therefore it disallows inferring variable type for None from two assignments in different scopes. For example:

from typing import Optional
a = None  # Need type annotation here if using --local-partial-types
b = None  # type: Optional[int]
class Foo:

bar = None # Need type annotation here if using --local-partial-types
baz = None # type: Optional[int]
def __init__(self) -> None:
self.bar = 1 reveal_type(Foo().bar) # Union[int, None] without --local-partial-types


Note: this option is always implicitly enabled in mypy daemon and will become enabled by default for mypy in a future release.


By default, imported values to a module are treated as exported and mypy allows other modules to import them. This flag changes the behavior to not re-export unless the item is imported using from-as or is included in __all__. Note this is always treated as enabled for stub files. For example:

# This won't re-export the value
from foo import bar
# This will re-export it as bar and allow other modules to import it
from foo import bar as bar
# This will also re-export bar
from foo import bar
__all__ = ['bar']



--strict-equality
By default, mypy allows always-false comparisons like 42 == 'no'. Use this flag to prohibit such comparisons of non-overlapping types, and similar identity and container checks:

from typing import List, Text
items: List[int]
if 'some string' in items:  # Error: non-overlapping container check!

... text: Text if text != b'other bytes': # Error: non-overlapping equality check!
... assert text is not None # OK, check against None is allowed as a special case.



This flag mode enables all optional error checking flags. You can see the list of flags enabled by strict mode in the full mypy --help output.

Note: the exact list of flags enabled by running --strict may change over time.


This flag allows disabling one or multiple error codes globally.

# no flag
x = 'a string'
x.trim()  # error: "str" has no attribute "trim"  [attr-defined]
# --disable-error-code attr-defined
x = 'a string'
x.trim()



This flag allows enabling one or multiple error codes globally.

Note: This flag will override disabled error codes from the --disable-error-code flag

# --disable-error-code attr-defined
x = 'a string'
x.trim()
# --disable-error-code attr-defined --enable-error-code attr-defined
x = 'a string'
x.trim()  # error: "str" has no attribute "trim"  [attr-defined]



Configuring error messages

The following flags let you adjust how much detail mypy displays in error messages.

This flag will precede all errors with "note" messages explaining the context of the error. For example, consider the following program:

class Test:

def foo(self, x: int) -> int:
return x + "bar"


Mypy normally displays an error message that looks like this:

main.py:3: error: Unsupported operand types for + ("int" and "str")


If we enable this flag, the error message now looks like this:

main.py: note: In member "foo" of class "Test":
main.py:3: error: Unsupported operand types for + ("int" and "str")



This flag will add column offsets to error messages. For example, the following indicates an error in line 12, column 9 (note that column offsets are 0-based):

main.py:12:9: error: Unsupported operand types for / ("int" and "str")



This flag will add an error code [<code>] to error messages. The error code is shown after each error message:

prog.py:1: error: "str" has no attribute "trim"  [attr-defined]


See error-codes for more information.


Use visually nicer output in error messages: use soft word wrap, show source code snippets, and show error location markers.

This flag will disable color output in error messages, enabled by default.

This flag will disable error summary. By default mypy shows a summary line including total number of errors, number of files with errors, and number of files checked.

Show absolute paths to files.

Incremental mode

By default, mypy will store type information into a cache. Mypy will use this information to avoid unnecessary recomputation when it type checks your code again. This can help speed up the type checking process, especially when most parts of your program have not changed since the previous mypy run.

If you want to speed up how long it takes to recheck your code beyond what incremental mode can offer, try running mypy in daemon mode.

This flag disables incremental mode: mypy will no longer reference the cache when re-run.

Note that mypy will still write out to the cache even when incremental mode is disabled: see the --cache-dir flag below for more details.


By default, mypy stores all cache data inside of a folder named .mypy_cache in the current directory. This flag lets you change this folder. This flag can also be useful for controlling cache use when using remote caching.

This setting will override the MYPY_CACHE_DIR environment variable if it is set.

Mypy will also always write to the cache even when incremental mode is disabled so it can "warm up" the cache. To disable writing to the cache, use --cache-dir=/dev/null (UNIX) or --cache-dir=nul (Windows).


Use an SQLite database to store the cache.

Include fine-grained dependency information in the cache for the mypy daemon.

By default, mypy will ignore cache data generated by a different version of mypy. This flag disables that behavior.

Skip cache internal consistency checks based on mtime.

Advanced options

The following flags are useful mostly for people who are interested in developing or debugging mypy internals.

This flag will invoke the Python debugger when mypy encounters a fatal error.

If set, this flag will display a full traceback when mypy encounters a fatal error.

Raise exception on fatal error.

This flag lets you use a custom module as a substitute for the typing module.

This flag specifies the directory where mypy looks for typeshed stubs, instead of the typeshed that ships with mypy. This is primarily intended to make it easier to test typeshed changes before submitting them upstream, but also allows you to use a forked version of typeshed.

This flag modifies both the --disallow-untyped-defs and --disallow-incomplete-defs flags so they also report errors if stubs in typeshed are missing type annotations or has incomplete annotations. If both flags are missing, --warn-incomplete-stub also does nothing.

This flag is mainly intended to be used by people who want contribute to typeshed and would like a convenient way to find gaps and omissions.

If you want mypy to report an error when your codebase uses an untyped function, whether that function is defined in typeshed or not, use the --disallow-untyped-calls flag. See untyped-definitions-and-calls for more details.


When mypy is asked to type check SOURCE_FILE, this flag makes mypy read from and type check the contents of SHADOW_FILE instead. However, diagnostics will continue to refer to SOURCE_FILE.

Specifying this argument multiple times (--shadow-file X1 Y1 --shadow-file X2 Y2) will allow mypy to perform multiple substitutions.

This allows tooling to create temporary files with helpful modifications without having to change the source file in place. For example, suppose we have a pipeline that adds reveal_type for certain variables. This pipeline is run on original.py to produce temp.py. Running mypy --shadow-file original.py temp.py original.py will then cause mypy to type check the contents of temp.py instead of original.py, but error messages will still reference original.py.


Report generation

If these flags are set, mypy will generate a report in the specified format into the specified directory.

Causes mypy to generate a text file report documenting how many expressions of type Any are present within your codebase.

Causes mypy to generate a Cobertura XML type checking coverage report.

You must install the lxml library to generate this report.


Causes mypy to generate an HTML type checking coverage report.

You must install the lxml library to generate this report.


Causes mypy to generate a text file report documenting the functions and lines that are typed and untyped within your codebase.

Causes mypy to generate a JSON file that maps each source file's absolute filename to a list of line numbers that belong to typed functions in that file.

Causes mypy to generate a flat text file report with per-module statistics of how many lines are typechecked etc.

Causes mypy to generate a text file type checking coverage report.

You must install the lxml library to generate this report.


Causes mypy to generate an XML type checking coverage report.

You must install the lxml library to generate this report.


Miscellaneous

Causes mypy to generate a JUnit XML test result document with type checking results. This can make it easier to integrate mypy with continuous integration (CI) tools.

This flag will make mypy print out all usages of a class member based on static type information. This feature is experimental.

This flag will give command line arguments that appear to be scripts (i.e. files whose name does not end in .py) a module name derived from the script name rather than the fixed name __main__.

This lets you check more than one script in a single mypy invocation. (The default __main__ is technically more correct, but if you have many scripts that import a large package, the behavior enabled by this flag is often more convenient.)


ENVIRONMENT

Additional module search path entries. The format is the same as the shell's $PATH: one or more directory pathnames separated by colons.

SEE ALSO

dmypy(1)

Full documentation is available online at: http://mypy.readthedocs.io/en/latest/getting_started.html or locally at: /usr/share/doc/mypy/html (requires mypy-doc package).

AUTHOR

Jukka Lehtosalo and contributors

February 20, 2021