## Summary
Use `$GITHUB_SHA` (the merged state of `feature` + `main` branch)
instead of `{{ github.event.pull_request.head.sha }}` (just the latest
`feature` commit) for building the "new" version of `ty` in the typing
conformance workflow.
## Test Plan
None.
## Summary
This PR fixes a few inaccuracies in attribute access on `TypedDict`s. It
also changes the return type of `type(person)` to `type[dict[str,
object]]` if `person: Person` is an inhabitant of a `TypedDict`
`Person`. We still use `type[Person]` as the *meta type* of Person,
however (see reasoning
[here](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19733#discussion_r2253297926)).
## Test Plan
Updated Markdown tests.
## Summary
This PR adds a new `Type::TypedDict` variant. Before this PR, we treated
`TypedDict`-based types as dynamic Todo-types, and I originally planned
to make this change a no-op. And we do in fact still treat that new
variant similar to a dynamic type when it comes to type properties such
as assignability and subtyping. But then I somehow tricked myself into
implementing some of the things correctly, so here we are. The two main
behavioral changes are: (1) we now also detect generic `TypedDict`s,
which removes a few false positives in the ecosystem, and (2) we now
support *attribute* access (not key-based indexing!) on these types,
i.e. we infer proper types for something like
`MyTypedDict.__required_keys__`. Nothing exciting yet, but gets the
infrastructure into place.
Note that with this PR, the type of (the type) `MyTypedDict` itself is
still represented as a `Type::ClassLiteral` or `Type::GenericAlias` (in
case `MyTypedDict` is generic). Only inhabitants of `MyTypedDict`
(instances of `dict` at runtime) are represented by `Type::TypedDict`.
We may want to revisit this decision in the future, if this turns out to
be too error-prone. Right now, we need to use `.is_typed_dict(db)` in
all the right places to distinguish between actual (generic) classes and
`TypedDict`s. But so far, it seemed unnecessary to add additional `Type`
variants for these as well.
part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/154
## Ecosystem impact
The new diagnostics on `cloud-init` look like true positives to me.
## Test Plan
Updated and new Markdown tests
## Summary
This is a follow-up to #19321.
Narrowing constraints introduced in a class scope were not applied even
when they can be applied in lazy nested scopes. This PR fixes so that
they are now applied.
Conversely, there were cases where narrowing constraints were being
applied in places where they should not, so it is also fixed.
## Test Plan
Some TODOs in `narrow/conditionals/nested.md` are now work correctly.
## Summary
This is a follow-up to #19321.
If we try to access a class variable before it is defined, the variable
is looked up in the global scope, rather than in any enclosing scopes.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/875.
## Test Plan
New tests in `narrow/conditionals/nested.md`.
## Summary
This PR enhances the `BLE001` rule to correctly detect blind exception
handling in tuple exceptions. Previously, the rule only checked single
exception types, but Python allows catching multiple exceptions using
tuples like `except (Exception, ValueError):`.
## Test Plan
It fails the following (whereas the main branch does not):
```bash
cargo run -p ruff -- check somefile.py --no-cache --select=BLE001
```
```python
# somefile.py
try:
1/0
except (ValueError, Exception) as e:
print(e)
```
```
somefile.py:3:21: BLE001 Do not catch blind exception: `Exception`
|
1 | try:
2 | 1/0
3 | except (ValueError, Exception) as e:
| ^^^^^^^^^ BLE001
4 | print(e)
|
Found 1 error.
```
## Summary
Support `as` patterns in reachability analysis:
```py
from typing import assert_never
def f(subject: str | int):
match subject:
case int() as x:
pass
case str():
pass
case _:
assert_never(subject) # would previously emit an error
```
Note that we still don't support inferring correct types for the bound
name (`x`).
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/928
## Test Plan
New Markdown tests
## Summary
This PR reduces the virality of some of the `Todo` types in
`infer_tuple_type_expression`. Rather than inferring `Todo`, we instead
infer `tuple[Todo, ...]`. This reflects the fact that whatever the
contents of the slice in a `tuple[]` type expression, we would always
infer some kind of tuple type as the result of the type expression. Any
tuple type should be assignable to `tuple[Todo, ...]`, so this shouldn't
introduce any new false positives; this can be seen in the ecosystem
report.
As a result of the change, we are now able to enforce in the signature
of `Type::infer_tuple_type_expression` that it returns an
`Option<TupleType<'db>>`, which is more strongly typed and expresses
clearly the invariant that a tuple type expression should always be
inferred as a `tuple` type. To enable this, it was necessary to refactor
several `TupleType` constructors in `tuple.rs` so that they return
`Option<TupleType>` rather than `Type`; this means that callers of these
constructor functions are now free to either propagate the
`Option<TupleType<'db>>` or convert it to a `Type<'db>`.
## Test Plan
Mdtests updated.
This PR contains the following updates:
| Package | Type | Update | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| [notify](https://redirect.github.com/notify-rs/notify) |
workspace.dependencies | minor | `8.1.0` -> `8.2.0` |
---
> [!WARNING]
> Some dependencies could not be looked up. Check the Dependency
Dashboard for more information.
---
### Release Notes
<details>
<summary>notify-rs/notify (notify)</summary>
###
[`v8.2.0`](https://redirect.github.com/notify-rs/notify/blob/HEAD/CHANGELOG.md#notify-820-2025-08-03)
[Compare
Source](https://redirect.github.com/notify-rs/notify/compare/notify-8.1.0...notify-8.2.0)
- FEATURE: notify user if inotify's `max_user_watches` has been reached
[#​698]
- FIX: `INotifyWatcher` ignore events with unknown watch descriptors
(instead of `EventMask::Q_OVERFLOW`) [#​700]
[#​698]: https://redirect.github.com/notify-rs/notify/pull/698
[#​700]: https://redirect.github.com/notify-rs/notify/pull/700
</details>
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This PR contains the following updates:
| Package | Type | Update | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
|
[cargo-bins/cargo-binstall](https://redirect.github.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall)
| action | patch | `v1.14.2` -> `v1.14.3` |
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### Release Notes
<details>
<summary>cargo-bins/cargo-binstall (cargo-bins/cargo-binstall)</summary>
###
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[Compare
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*Binstall is a tool to fetch and install Rust-based executables as
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most cases. Install it today with `cargo install cargo-binstall`, from
the binaries below, or if you already have it, upgrade with `cargo
binstall cargo-binstall`.*
##### In this release:
- Fix race condition in target detections
([#​2238](https://redirect.github.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall/issues/2238))
##### Other changes:
- Upgrade dependencies
</details>
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This PR contains the following updates:
| Package | Type | Update | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| [serde_json](https://redirect.github.com/serde-rs/json) |
workspace.dependencies | patch | `1.0.141` -> `1.0.142` |
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[Compare
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- impl Default for \&Value
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## Summary
When splitting triple-quoted, raw strings one has to take care before attempting to make each item have single-quotes.
Fixes#19577
---------
Co-authored-by: dylwil3 <dylwil3@gmail.com>
This is subtle, and the root cause became more apparent with #19604,
since we now have many more cases of superclasses and subclasses using
different typevars. The issue is easiest to see in the following:
```py
class C[T]:
def __init__(self, t: T) -> None: ...
class D[U](C[T]):
pass
reveal_type(C(1)) # revealed: C[int]
reveal_type(D(1)) # should be: D[int]
```
When instantiating a generic class, the `__init__` method inherits the
generic context of that class. This lets our call binding machinery
infer a specialization for that context.
Prior to this PR, the instantiation of `C` worked just fine. Its
`__init__` method would inherit the `[T]` generic context, and we would
infer `{T = int}` as the specialization based on the argument
parameters.
It didn't work for `D`. The issue is that the `__init__` method was
inheriting the generic context of the class where `__init__` was defined
(here, `C` and `[T]`). At the call site, we would then infer `{T = int}`
as the specialization — but that wouldn't help us specialize `D[U]`,
since `D` does not have `T` in its generic context!
Instead, the `__init__` method should inherit the generic context of the
class that we are performing the lookup on (here, `D` and `[U]`). That
lets us correctly infer `{U = int}` as the specialization, which we can
successfully apply to `D[U]`.
(Note that `__init__` refers to `C`'s typevars in its signature, but
that's okay; our member lookup logic already applies the `T = U`
specialization when returning a member of `C` while performing a lookup
on `D`, transforming its signature from `(Self, T) -> None` to `(Self,
U) -> None`.)
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/588
This PR introduces a few related changes:
- We now keep track of each time a legacy typevar is bound in a
different generic context (e.g. class, function), and internally create
a new `TypeVarInstance` for each usage. This means the rest of the code
can now assume that salsa-equivalent `TypeVarInstance`s refer to the
same typevar, even taking into account that legacy typevars can be used
more than once.
- We also go ahead and track the binding context of PEP 695 typevars.
That's _much_ easier to track since we have the binding context right
there during type inference.
- With that in place, we can now include the name of the binding context
when rendering typevars (e.g. `T@f` instead of `T`)
## Summary
Adds an initial set of tests based on the highest-priority items in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/154. This is certainly not yet
exhaustive (required/non-required, `total`, and other things are
missing), but will be useful to measure progress on this feature.
## Test Plan
Checked intended behavior against runtime and other type checkers.
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## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
Part of #18972
This PR makes [unnecessary-from-float
(FURB164)](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/unnecessary-from-float/#unnecessary-from-float-furb164)'s
example error out-of-the-box.
[Old example](https://play.ruff.rs/807ef72f-9671-408d-87ab-8b8bad65b33f)
```py
Decimal.from_float(4.2)
Decimal.from_float(float("inf"))
Fraction.from_float(4.2)
Fraction.from_decimal(Decimal("4.2"))
```
[New example](https://play.ruff.rs/303680d1-8a68-4b6c-a5fd-d79c56eb0f88)
```py
from decimal import Decimal
from fractions import Fraction
Decimal.from_float(4.2)
Decimal.from_float(float("inf"))
Fraction.from_float(4.2)
Fraction.from_decimal(Decimal("4.2"))
```
The "Use instead" section also had imports added, and one of the fixed
examples was slightly wrong and needed modification.
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
N/A, no functionality/tests affected
## Summary
Adds validation to subscript assignment expressions.
```py
class Foo: ...
class Bar:
__setattr__ = None
class Baz:
def __setitem__(self, index: str, value: int) -> None:
pass
# We now emit a diagnostic on these statements
Foo()[1] = 2
Bar()[1] = 2
Baz()[1] = 2
```
Also improves error messages on invalid `__getitem__` expressions
## Test Plan
Update mdtests and add more to `subscript/instance.md`
---------
Co-authored-by: David Peter <sharkdp@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
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## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
Part of #18972
This PR makes [meta-class-abc-meta
(FURB180)](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/meta-class-abc-meta/#meta-class-abc-meta-furb180)'s
example error out-of-the-box.
[Old example](https://play.ruff.rs/6beca1be-45cd-4e5a-aafa-6a0584c10d64)
```py
class C(metaclass=ABCMeta):
pass
```
[New example](https://play.ruff.rs/bbad34da-bf07-44e6-9f34-53337e8f57d4)
```py
import abc
class C(metaclass=abc.ABCMeta):
pass
```
The "Use instead" section as also modified similarly.
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
N/A, no functionality/tests affected
## Summary
Fixes#18729 and fixes#16802
## Test Plan
Manually verified via CLI that Ruff no longer enters an infinite loop by
running:
```sh
echo 1 | ruff --isolated check - --select I002,UP010 --fix
```
with `required-imports = ["from __future__ import generator_stop"]` set
in the config, confirming “All checks passed!” and no snapshots were
generated.
---------
Co-authored-by: Brent Westbrook <brentrwestbrook@gmail.com>
Summary
--
Fixes#19640. I'm not sure these are the exact fixes we really want, but
I
reproduced the issue in a 32-bit Docker container and tracked down the
causes,
so I figured I'd open a PR.
As I commented on the issue, the `goto_references` test depends on the
iteration
order of the files in an `FxHashSet` in `Indexed`. In this case, we can
just
sort the output in test code.
Similarly, the tuple case depended on the order of overloads inserted in
an
`FxHashMap`. `FxIndexMap` seemed like a convenient drop-in replacement,
but I
don't know if that will have other detrimental effects. I did have to
change the
assertion for the tuple test, but I think it should now be stable across
architectures.
Test Plan
--
Running the tests in the aforementioned Docker container
Issue: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/19498
## Summary
[missing-required-import](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/missing-required-import/)
inserts the missing import on the line immediately following the last
line of the docstring. However, if the dosctring is immediately followed
by a continuation token (i.e. backslash) then this leads to a syntax
error because Python interprets the docstring and the inserted import to
be on the same line.
The proposed solution in this PR is to check if the first token after a
file docstring is a continuation character, and if so, to advance an
additional line before inserting the missing import.
## Test Plan
Added a unit test, and the following example was verified manually:
Given this simple test Python file:
```python
"Hello, World!"\
print(__doc__)
```
and this ruff linting configuration in the `pyproject.toml` file:
```toml
[tool.ruff.lint]
select = ["I"]
[tool.ruff.lint.isort]
required-imports = ["import sys"]
```
Without the changes in this PR, the ruff linter would try to insert the
missing import in line 2, resulting in a syntax error, and report the
following:
`error: Fix introduced a syntax error. Reverting all changes.`
With the changes in this PR, ruff correctly advances one more line
before adding the missing import, resulting in the following output:
```python
"Hello, World!"\
import sys
print(__doc__)
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Jim Hoekstra <jim.hoekstra@pacmed.nl>
## Summary
This PR improves our generics solver such that we are able to solve the
`TypeVar` in this snippet to `int | str` (the union of the elements in
the heterogeneous tuple) by upcasting the heterogeneous tuple to its
pure-homogeneous-tuple supertype:
```py
def f[T](x: tuple[T, ...]) -> T:
return x[0]
def g(x: tuple[int, str]):
reveal_type(f(x))
```
## Test Plan
Mdtests. Some TODOs remain in the mdtest regarding solving `TypeVar`s
for mixed tuples, but I think this PR on its own is a significant step
forward for our generics solver when it comes to tuple types.
---------
Co-authored-by: Douglas Creager <dcreager@dcreager.net>
## Summary
Add support for `async for` loops and async iterables.
part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/151
## Ecosystem impact
```diff
- boostedblob/listing.py:445:54: warning[unused-ignore-comment] Unused blanket `type: ignore` directive
```
This is correct. We now find a true positive in the `# type: ignore`'d
code.
All of the other ecosystem hits are of the type
```diff
trio (https://github.com/python-trio/trio)
+ src/trio/_core/_tests/test_guest_mode.py:532:24: error[not-iterable] Object of type `MemorySendChannel[int] | MemoryReceiveChannel[int]` may not be iterable
```
The message is correct, because only `MemoryReceiveChannel` has an
`__aiter__` method, but `MemorySendChannel` does not. What's not correct
is our inferred type here. It should be `MemoryReceiveChannel[int]`, not
the union of the two. This is due to missing unpacking support for tuple
subclasses, which @AlexWaygood is working on. I don't think this should
block merging this PR, because those wrong types are already there,
without this PR.
## Test Plan
New Markdown tests and snapshot tests for diagnostics.
## Summary
I was a bit stuck on some snapshot differences I was seeing in #19415,
but @BurntSushi pointed out that `annotate-snippets` already normalizes
tabs on its own, which was very helpful! Instead of applying this change
directly to the other branch, I wanted to try applying it in
`ruff_linter` first. This should very slightly reduce the number of
changes in #19415 proper.
It looks like `annotate-snippets` always expands a tab to four spaces,
whereas I think we were aligning to tab stops:
```diff
6 | spam(ham[1], { eggs: 2})
7 | #: E201:1:6
- 8 | spam( ham[1], {eggs: 2})
- | ^^^ E201
+ 8 | spam( ham[1], {eggs: 2})
+ | ^^^^ E201
```
```diff
61 | #: E203:2:15 E702:2:16
62 | if x == 4:
-63 | print(x, y) ; x, y = y, x
- | ^ E203
+63 | print(x, y) ; x, y = y, x
+ | ^^^^ E203
```
```diff
E27.py:15:6: E271 [*] Multiple spaces after keyword
|
-13 | True and False
+13 | True and False
14 | #: E271
15 | a and b
| ^^ E271
```
I don't think this is too bad and has the major benefit of allowing us
to pass the non-tab-expanded range to `annotate-snippets` in #19415,
where it's also displayed in the header. Ruff doesn't have this problem
currently because it uses its own concise diagnostic output as the
header for full diagnostics, where the pre-expansion range is used
directly.
## Test Plan
Existing tests with a few snapshot updates
## Summary
- Add support for the return types of `async` functions
- Add type inference for `await` expressions
- Add support for `async with` / async context managers
- Add support for `yield from` expressions
This PR is generally lacking proper error handling in some cases (e.g.
illegal `__await__` attributes). I'm planning to work on this in a
follow-up.
part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/151
closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/736
## Ecosystem
There are a lot of true positives on `prefect` which look similar to:
```diff
prefect (https://github.com/PrefectHQ/prefect)
+ src/integrations/prefect-aws/tests/workers/test_ecs_worker.py:406:12: error[unresolved-attribute] Type `str` has no attribute `status_code`
```
This is due to a wrong return type annotation
[here](e926b8c4c1/src/integrations/prefect-aws/tests/workers/test_ecs_worker.py (L355-L391)).
```diff
mitmproxy (https://github.com/mitmproxy/mitmproxy)
+ test/mitmproxy/addons/test_clientplayback.py:18:1: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument to function `asynccontextmanager` is incorrect: Expected `(...) -> AsyncIterator[Unknown]`, found `def tcp_server(handle_conn, **server_args) -> Unknown | tuple[str, int]`
```
[This](a4d794c59a/test/mitmproxy/addons/test_clientplayback.py (L18-L19))
is a true positive. That function should return
`AsyncIterator[Address]`, not `Address`.
I looked through almost all of the other new diagnostics and they all
look like known problems or true positives.
## Typing conformance
The typing conformance diff looks good.
## Test Plan
New Markdown tests
Summary
--
This partially reverts commit 13634ff433
after issues in the release today.
Test Plan
--
```shell
uv build --sdist
tar -tzf dist/ruff-0.12.6.tar.gz | grep ruff-0.12.6/LICENSE
```
which finds the license now.
Summary
--
This PR adds a `Checker::context` method that returns the underlying
`LintContext` to unify `Candidate::into_diagnostic` and
`Candidate::report_diagnostic` in our ambiguous Unicode character
checks. This avoids some duplication and also avoids collecting a `Vec`
of `Candidate`s only to iterate over it later.
Test Plan
--
Existing tests
## Summary
Fixes#19385.
Based on [unnecessary-placeholder
(PIE790)](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/unnecessary-placeholder/)
behavior, [ellipsis-in-non-empty-class-body
(PYI013)](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/ellipsis-in-non-empty-class-body/)
now safely preserve inline comment on ellipsis removal.
## Test Plan
A new test class was added:
```python
class NonEmptyChildWithInlineComment:
value: int
... # preserve me
```
with the following expected fix:
```python
class NonEmptyChildWithInlineComment:
value: int
# preserve me
```
The diagram is written in the Dot language, which can
be converted to SVG (or any other image) by GraphViz.
I thought it was a good idea to write this down in
preparation for adding routines that list modules.
Code reuse is likely to be difficult and I wanted to
be sure I understood how it worked.
I mostly just did this because the long string literals were annoying
me. And these can make rustfmt give up on formatting.
I also re-flowed some long comment lines while I was here.
I'm not sure if this used to be used elsewhere, but it no longer is.
And it looks like an internal-only helper function, so just un-export
it.
And note that `ModuleNameIngredient` is also un-exported, so this
function isn't really usable outside of its defining module anyway.
Summary
--
I noticed while reviewing #19390 that in `check_tokens` we were still
passing
around an extra `LinterSettings`, despite all of the same functions also
receiving a `LintContext` with its own settings.
This PR adds the `LintContext::settings` method and calls that instead
of using
the separate `LinterSettings`.
Test Plan
--
Existing tests
## Summary
Resolves#19531
I've implemented a check to determine whether the for_stmt target is
declared as global or nonlocal. I believe we should skip the rule in all
such cases, since variables declared this way are intended for use
outside the loop scope, making value changes expected behavior.
## Test Plan
Added two test cases for global and nonlocal variable to snapshot.
This PR improves the "signature help" language server feature in two
ways:
1. It adds support for the recently-introduced "stub mapper" which maps
symbol declarations within stubs to their implementation counterparts.
This allows the signature help to display docstrings from the original
implementation.
2. It incorporates a more robust fix to a bug that was addressed in a
[previous PR](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19542). It also
adds more comprehensive tests to cover this case.
Co-authored-by: UnboundVariable <unbound@gmail.com>
This eliminates the panic reported in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/909, though it doesn't address
the underlying cause, which is that we aren't yet checking the types of
the fields of a protocol when checking whether a class implements the
protocol. And in particular, if a class explictly opts out of iteration
via
```py
class NotIterable:
__iter__ = None
```
we currently treat that as "having an `__iter__`" member, and therefore
implementing `Iterable`.
Note that the assumption that was in the comment before is still
correct: call binding will have already checked that the argument
satisfies `Iterable`, and so it shouldn't be an error to iterate over
said argument. But arguably, the new logic in this PR is a better way to
discharge that assumption — instead of panicking if we happen to be
wrong, fall back on an unknown iteration result.
## Summary
Fixes#18844
I'm not too sure if the solution is as simple as the way I implemented
it, but I'm curious to see if we are covering all cases correctly here.
---------
Co-authored-by: Brent Westbrook <36778786+ntBre@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Brent Westbrook <brentrwestbrook@gmail.com>
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## Summary
As a follow-up to #18949 (suggested
[here](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/18949#pullrequestreview-2998417889)),
this PR implements auto-fix logic for `PLC0207`.
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
Existing tests pass, with updates to the snapshot so that it expects the
new output that comes along with the auto-fix.
## Summary
Split the "Generator functions" tests into two parts. The first part
(synchronous) refers to a function called `i` from a function `i2`. But
`i` is later redeclared in the asynchronous part, which was probably not
intended.
## Summary
Declare licenses using only these two fields, as per PEP 639:
* `license`: SPDX license expression consisting of one or more license
identifiers
* `license-files`: list of license file glob patterns
Supported by maturin ≥ 1.9.0:
https://www.maturin.rs/changelog.html
## Test Plan
N/A
This PR contains the following updates:
| Package | Type | Update | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
|
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| repository | patch | `v0.12.4` -> `v0.12.5` |
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|
[cargo-bins/cargo-binstall](https://redirect.github.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall)
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This PR contains the following updates:
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| [criterion](https://bheisler.github.io/criterion.rs/book/index.html)
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## Summary
Follow-up to https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19556, this PR adds
the workflow that computes the diagnostic diff which the workflow
introduced in the linked PR will add as a comment.
This workflow is similar to the [ty ecosystem-analyzer
workflow](d781a6ab3f/.github/workflows/ty-ecosystem-analyzer.yaml).
Closes: astral-sh/ty#212
## Test Plan
1. Initially there's no diff to show
2. This
[commit](d0db9937df)
comments out a rule which updates the comment with the diff
3. Later, that commit is reverted and the diff goes away
Use the comment history to look at the diff output where the order of
the history corresponds to the steps mentioned above in reverse order
i.e., the edit in the middle will contain the diff output:
<img width="1082" height="313" alt="Screenshot 2025-07-25 at 21 09 26"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/6aceb60c-1987-4b9a-9063-e3999844f035"
/>
As of [this cpython PR](https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/135996),
it is not allowed to concatenate t-strings with non-t-strings,
implicitly or explicitly. Expressions such as `"foo" t"{bar}"` are now
syntax errors.
This PR updates some AST nodes and parsing to reflect this change.
The structural change is that `TStringPart` is no longer needed, since,
as in the case of `BytesStringLiteral`, the only possibilities are that
we have a single `TString` or a vector of such (representing an implicit
concatenation of t-strings). This removes a level of nesting from many
AST expressions (which is what all the snapshot changes reflect), and
simplifies some logic in the implementation of visitors, for example.
The other change of note is in the parser. When we meet an implicit
concatenation of string-like literals, we now count the number of
t-string literals. If these do not exhaust the total number of
implicitly concatenated pieces, then we emit a syntax error. To recover
from this syntax error, we encode any t-string pieces as _invalid_
string literals (which means we flag them as invalid, record their
range, and record the value as `""`). Note that if at least one of the
pieces is an f-string we prefer to parse the entire string as an
f-string; otherwise we parse it as a string.
This logic is exactly the same as how we currently treat
`BytesStringLiteral` parsing and error recovery - and carries with it
the same pros and cons.
Finally, note that I have not implemented any changes in the
implementation of the formatter. As far as I can tell, none are needed.
I did change a few of the fixtures so that we are always concatenating
t-strings with t-strings.
This PR adds support for the "selection range" language server feature.
This feature was recently requested by a ty user in [this feature
request](https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/882).
This feature allows a client to implement "smart selection expansion"
based on the structure of the parse tree. For example, if you type
"shift-ctrl-right-arrow" in VS Code, the current selection will be
expanded to include the parent AST node. Conversely,
"shift-ctrl-left-arrow" shrinks the selection.
We will probably need to tune the granularity of selection expansion
based on user feedback. The initial implementation includes most AST
nodes, but users may find this to be too fine-grained. We have the
option of skipping some AST nodes that are not as meaningful when
editing code.
Co-authored-by: UnboundVariable <unbound@gmail.com>
We now correctly exclude legacy typevars from enclosing scopes when
constructing the generic context for a generic function.
more detail:
A function is generic if it refers to legacy typevars in its signature:
```py
from typing import TypeVar
T = TypeVar("T")
def f(t: T) -> T:
return t
```
Generic functions are allowed to appear inside of other generic
contexts. When they do, they can refer to the typevars of those
enclosing generic contexts, and that should not rebind the typevar:
```py
from typing import TypeVar, Generic
T = TypeVar("T")
U = TypeVar("U")
class C(Generic[T]):
@staticmethod
def method(t: T, u: U) -> None: ...
# revealed: def method(t: int, u: U) -> None
reveal_type(C[int].method)
```
This substitution was already being performed correctly, but we were
also still including the enclosing legacy typevars in the method's own
generic context, which can be seen via `ty_extensions.generic_context`
(which has been updated to work on generic functions and methods):
```py
from ty_extensions import generic_context
# before: tuple[T, U]
# after: tuple[U]
reveal_type(generic_context(C[int].method))
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
## Summary
Changing `BLE001` (blind-except) so that it does not flag `except`
clauses which include `logging.critical(..., exc_info=True)`.
## Test Plan
It passes the following (whereas the `main` branch does not):
```sh
$ cargo run -p ruff -- check somefile.py --no-cache --select=BLE001
```
```python
# somefile.py
import logging
try:
print("Hello world!")
except Exception:
logging.critical("Did not run.", exc_info=True)
```
Related: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/19519
Small rewording to indicate that core development is done but that we
may add breaking changes.
Feel free to bikeshed!
Test:
```console
❯ echo "t''" | cargo run -p ruff -- check --no-cache --isolated --target-version py314 -
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.13s
Running `target/debug/ruff check --no-cache --isolated --target-version py314 -`
warning: Support for Python 3.14 is in preview and may undergo breaking changes. Enable `preview` to remove this warning.
All checks passed!
```
This PR adds support for "document symbols" and "workspace symbols"
language server features. Most of the logic to implement these features
is shared.
The "document symbols" feature returns a list of all symbols within a
specified source file. Clients can specify whether they want a flat or
hierarchical list. Document symbols are typically presented by a client
in an "outline" form. Here's what this looks like in VS Code, for
example.
<img width="240" height="249" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/82b11f4f-32ec-4165-ba01-d6496ad13bdf"
/>
The "workspace symbols" feature returns a list of all symbols across the
entire workspace that match some user-supplied query string. This allows
the user to quickly find and navigate to any symbol within their code.
<img width="450" height="134" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/aac131e0-9464-4adf-8a6c-829da028c759"
/>
---------
Co-authored-by: UnboundVariable <unbound@gmail.com>
Summary
--
I looked at other uses of `TextEmitter`, and I think this should be the
only one affected by this. The other integration tests must work
properly since they're run with `assert_cmd_snapshot!`, which I assume
triggers the `SHOULD_COLORIZE` case, and the `cfg!(test)` check will
work for uses in `ruff_linter`.
4a4dc38b5b/crates/ruff_linter/src/message/text.rs (L36-L44)
Alternatively, we could probably move this to a CLI test instead.
Test Plan
--
`cargo test -p ruff`, which was failing on `main` with color codes in
the output before this
## Summary
We currently infer a `@Todo` type whenever we access an attribute on an
intersection type with negative components. This can happen very
naturally. Consequently, this `@Todo` type is rather pervasive and hides
a lot of true positives that ty could otherwise detect:
```py
class Foo:
attr: int = 1
def _(f: Foo | None):
if f:
reveal_type(f) # Foo & ~AlwaysFalsy
reveal_type(f.attr) # now: int, previously: @Todo
```
The changeset here proposes to handle member access on these
intersection types by simply ignoring all negative contributions. This
is not always ideal: a negative contribution like `~<Protocol with
members 'attr'>` could be a hint that `.attr` should not be accessible
on the full intersection type. The behavior can certainly be improved in
the future, but this seems like a reasonable initial step to get rid of
this unnecessary `@Todo` type.
## Ecosystem analysis
There are quite a few changes here. I spot-checked them and found one
bug where attribute access on pure negation types (`~P == object & ~P`)
would not allow attributes on `object` to be accessed. After that was
fixed, I only see true positives and known problems. The fact that a lot
of `unused-ignore-comment` diagnostics go away are also evidence for the
fact that this touches a sensitive area, where static analysis clashes
with dynamically adding attributes to objects:
```py
… # type: ignore # Runtime attribute access
```
## Test Plan
Updated tests.
## Summary
Add basic support for `dataclasses.field`:
* remove fields with `init=False` from the signature of the synthesized
`__init__` method
* infer correct default value types from `default` or `default_factory`
arguments
```py
from dataclasses import dataclass, field
def default_roles() -> list[str]:
return ["user"]
@dataclass
class Member:
name: str
roles: list[str] = field(default_factory=default_roles)
tag: str | None = field(default=None, init=False)
# revealed: (self: Member, name: str, roles: list[str] = list[str]) -> None
reveal_type(Member.__init__)
```
Support for `kw_only` has **not** been added.
part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/111
## Test Plan
New Markdown tests
This PR adds support for the "document highlights" language server
feature.
This feature allows a client to highlight all instances of a selected
name within a document. Without this feature, editors perform
highlighting based on a simple text match. This adds semantic knowledge.
The implementation of this feature largely overlaps that of the
recently-added "references" feature. This PR refactors the existing
"references.rs" module, separating out the functionality and tests that
are specific to the other language feature into a "goto_references.rs"
module. The "references.rs" module now contains the functionality that
is common to "goto references", "document highlights" and "rename"
(which is not yet implemented).
As part of this PR, I also created a new `ReferenceTarget` type which is
similar to the existing `NavigationTarget` type but better suited for
references. This idea was suggested by @MichaReiser in [this code review
feedback](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19475#discussion_r2224061006)
from a previous PR. Notably, this new type contains a field that
specifies the "kind" of the reference (read, write or other). This
"kind" is needed for the document highlights feature.
Before: all textual instances of `foo` are highlighted
<img width="156" height="126" alt="Screenshot 2025-07-23 at 12 51 09 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/37ccdb2f-d48a-473d-89d5-8e89cb6c394e"
/>
After: only semantic matches are highlighted
<img width="164" height="157" alt="Screenshot 2025-07-23 at 12 52 05 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/2efadadd-4691-4815-af04-b031e74c81b7"
/>
---------
Co-authored-by: UnboundVariable <unbound@gmail.com>
## Summary
Expand cases in which ruff can offer a fix for `RUF039` (some of which
are unsafe).
While turning `"\n"` (== `\n`) into `r"\n"` (== `\\n`) is not equivalent
at run-time, it's still functionally equivalent to do so in the context
of [regex
patterns](https://docs.python.org/3/library/re.html#regular-expression-syntax)
as they themselves interpret the escape sequence. Therefore, an unsafe
fix can be offered.
Further, this PR also makes ruff offer fixes for byte string literals,
not only strings literals as before.
## Test Plan
Tests for all escape sequences have been added.
## Related
Closes: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/16713
---------
Co-authored-by: Brent Westbrook <36778786+ntBre@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary
I saw that this creates a lot of false positives in the ecosystem, and
it seemed to be relatively easy to add basic support for this.
Some preliminary work on this was done by @InSyncWithFoo — thank you.
part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/111
## Ecosystem analysis
The results look good.
## Test Plan
New Markdown tests
---------
Co-authored-by: InSync <insyncwithfoo@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
## Summary
The generated fix for `RUF033` would cause a syntax error for named
expressions as parameter defaults.
```python
from dataclasses import InitVar, dataclass
@dataclass
class Foo:
def __post_init__(self, bar: int = (x := 1)) -> None:
pass
```
would be turned into
```python
from dataclasses import InitVar, dataclass
@dataclass
class Foo:
x: InitVar[int] = x := 1
def __post_init__(self, bar: int = (x := 1)) -> None:
pass
```
instead of the syntactically correct
```python
# ...
x: InitVar[int] = (x := 1)
# ...
```
## Test Plan
Test reproducer (plus some extra tests) have been added to the test
suite.
## Related
Fixes: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/18950
## Summary
A couple of months ago now
(https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff-pre-commit/pull/124) we changed the
hook ID from just `ruff` to `ruff-check` to mirror `ruff-format`. I
noticed the `ruff (legacy alias)` when running pre-commit on the release
today and realized we should probably update.
## Test Plan
Commit on this PR:
```shell
> git commit -m "Update pre-commit hook name"
check for merge conflicts................................................Passed
Validate pyproject.toml..............................(no files to check)Skipped
mdformat.............................................(no files to check)Skipped
markdownlint-fix.....................................(no files to check)Skipped
blacken-docs.........................................(no files to check)Skipped
typos....................................................................Passed
cargo fmt............................................(no files to check)Skipped
ruff format..........................................(no files to check)Skipped
ruff check...........................................(no files to check)Skipped <--
prettier.................................................................Passed
zizmor...............................................(no files to check)Skipped
Validate GitHub Workflows............................(no files to check)Skipped
shellcheck...........................................(no files to check)Skipped
```
Compared to the release branch:
```shell
> pre-commit run
...
cargo fmt............................................(no files to check)Skipped
ruff format..........................................(no files to check)Skipped
ruff (legacy alias)..................................(no files to check)Skipped
...
```
2025-07-24 09:44:47 -04:00
647 changed files with 31762 additions and 14061 deletions
This is a follow-up release to 0.12.6. Because of an issue in the package metadata, 0.12.6 failed to publish fully to PyPI and has been yanked. Similarly, there is no GitHub release or Git tag for 0.12.6. The contents of the 0.12.7 release are identical to 0.12.6, except for the updated metadata.
## 0.12.6
### Preview features
- \[`flake8-commas`\] Add support for trailing comma checks in type parameter lists (`COM812`, `COM819`) ([#19390](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19390))
- \[`pylint`\] Implement auto-fix for `missing-maxsplit-arg` (`PLC0207`) ([#19387](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19387))
- \[`ruff`\] Offer fixes for `RUF039` in more cases ([#19065](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19065))
### Bug fixes
- Support `.pyi` files in ruff analyze graph ([#19611](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19611))
- \[`flake8-pyi`\] Preserve inline comment in ellipsis removal (`PYI013`) ([#19399](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19399))
- \[`perflint`\] Ignore rule if target is `global` or `nonlocal` (`PERF401`) ([#19539](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19539))
- \[`pyupgrade`\] Fix `UP030` to avoid modifying double curly braces in format strings ([#19378](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19378))
- \[`refurb`\] Ignore decorated functions for `FURB118` ([#19339](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19339))
- \[`refurb`\] Mark `int` and `bool` cases for `Decimal.from_float` as safe fixes (`FURB164`) ([#19468](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19468))
- \[`ruff`\] Fix `RUF033` for named default expressions ([#19115](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19115))
### Rule changes
- \[`flake8-blind-except`\] Change `BLE001` to permit `logging.critical(..., exc_info=True)` ([#19520](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19520))
### Performance
- Add support for specifying minimum dots in detected string imports ([#19538](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19538))
"text": "## What it does\nChecks for unused imports.\n\n## Why is this bad?\nUnused imports add a performance overhead at runtime, and risk creating\nimport cycles. They also increase the cognitive load of reading the code.\n\nIf an import statement is used to check for the availability or existence\nof a module, consider using `importlib.util.find_spec` instead.\n\nIf an import statement is used to re-export a symbol as part of a module's\npublic interface, consider using a \"redundant\" import alias, which\ninstructs Ruff (and other tools) to respect the re-export, and avoid\nmarking it as unused, as in:\n\n```python\nfrom module import member as member\n```\n\nAlternatively, you can use `__all__` to declare a symbol as part of the module's\ninterface, as in:\n\n```python\n# __init__.py\nimport some_module\n\n__all__ = [\"some_module\"]\n```\n\n## Fix safety\n\nFixes to remove unused imports are safe, except in `__init__.py` files.\n\nApplying fixes to `__init__.py` files is currently in preview. The fix offered depends on the\ntype of the unused import. Ruff will suggest a safe fix to export first-party imports with\neither a redundant alias or, if already present in the file, an `__all__` entry. If multiple\n`__all__` declarations are present, Ruff will not offer a fix. Ruff will suggest an unsafe fix\nto remove third-party and standard library imports -- the fix is unsafe because the module's\ninterface changes.\n\n## Example\n\n```python\nimport numpy as np # unused import\n\n\ndef area(radius):\n return 3.14 * radius**2\n```\n\nUse instead:\n\n```python\ndef area(radius):\n return 3.14 * radius**2\n```\n\nTo check the availability of a module, use `importlib.util.find_spec`:\n\n```python\nfrom importlib.util import find_spec\n\nif find_spec(\"numpy\") is not None:\n print(\"numpy is installed\")\nelse:\n print(\"numpy is not installed\")\n```\n\n## Preview\nWhen [preview](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/preview/) is enabled,\nthe criterion for determining whether an import is first-party\nis stricter, which could affect the suggested fix. See [this FAQ section](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/faq/#how-does-ruff-determine-which-of-my-imports-are-first-party-third-party-etc) for more details.\n\n## Options\n- `lint.ignore-init-module-imports`\n- `lint.pyflakes.allowed-unused-imports`\n\n## References\n- [Python documentation: `import`](https://docs.python.org/3/reference/simple_stmts.html#the-import-statement)\n- [Python documentation: `importlib.util.find_spec`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/importlib.html#importlib.util.find_spec)\n- [Typing documentation: interface conventions](https://typing.python.org/en/latest/source/libraries.html#library-interface-public-and-private-symbols)\n"
"text": "## What it does\nChecks for unused imports.\n\n## Why is this bad?\nUnused imports add a performance overhead at runtime, and risk creating\nimport cycles. They also increase the cognitive load of reading the code.\n\nIf an import statement is used to check for the availability or existence\nof a module, consider using `importlib.util.find_spec` instead.\n\nIf an import statement is used to re-export a symbol as part of a module's\npublic interface, consider using a \"redundant\" import alias, which\ninstructs Ruff (and other tools) to respect the re-export, and avoid\nmarking it as unused, as in:\n\n```python\nfrom module import member as member\n```\n\nAlternatively, you can use `__all__` to declare a symbol as part of the module's\ninterface, as in:\n\n```python\n# __init__.py\nimport some_module\n\n__all__ = [\"some_module\"]\n```\n\n## Fix safety\n\nFixes to remove unused imports are safe, except in `__init__.py` files.\n\nApplying fixes to `__init__.py` files is currently in preview. The fix offered depends on the\ntype of the unused import. Ruff will suggest a safe fix to export first-party imports with\neither a redundant alias or, if already present in the file, an `__all__` entry. If multiple\n`__all__` declarations are present, Ruff will not offer a fix. Ruff will suggest an unsafe fix\nto remove third-party and standard library imports -- the fix is unsafe because the module's\ninterface changes.\n\n## Example\n\n```python\nimport numpy as np # unused import\n\n\ndef area(radius):\n return 3.14 * radius**2\n```\n\nUse instead:\n\n```python\ndef area(radius):\n return 3.14 * radius**2\n```\n\nTo check the availability of a module, use `importlib.util.find_spec`:\n\n```python\nfrom importlib.util import find_spec\n\nif find_spec(\"numpy\") is not None:\n print(\"numpy is installed\")\nelse:\n print(\"numpy is not installed\")\n```\n\n## Preview\nWhen [preview](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/preview/) is enabled,\nthe criterion for determining whether an import is first-party\nis stricter, which could affect the suggested fix. See [this FAQ section](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/faq/#how-does-ruff-determine-which-of-my-imports-are-first-party-third-party-etc) for more details.\n\n## Options\n- `lint.ignore-init-module-imports`\n- `lint.pyflakes.allowed-unused-imports`\n\n## References\n- [Python documentation: `import`](https://docs.python.org/3/reference/simple_stmts.html#the-import-statement)\n- [Python documentation: `importlib.util.find_spec`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/importlib.html#importlib.util.find_spec)\n- [Typing documentation: interface conventions](https://typing.python.org/en/latest/spec/distributing.html#library-interface-public-and-private-symbols)\n"
},
"help": {
"text": "`{name}` imported but unused; consider using `importlib.util.find_spec` to test for availability"
"text": "## What it does\nChecks for unused imports.\n\n## Why is this bad?\nUnused imports add a performance overhead at runtime, and risk creating\nimport cycles. They also increase the cognitive load of reading the code.\n\nIf an import statement is used to check for the availability or existence\nof a module, consider using `importlib.util.find_spec` instead.\n\nIf an import statement is used to re-export a symbol as part of a module's\npublic interface, consider using a \"redundant\" import alias, which\ninstructs Ruff (and other tools) to respect the re-export, and avoid\nmarking it as unused, as in:\n\n```python\nfrom module import member as member\n```\n\nAlternatively, you can use `__all__` to declare a symbol as part of the module's\ninterface, as in:\n\n```python\n# __init__.py\nimport some_module\n\n__all__ = [\"some_module\"]\n```\n\n## Fix safety\n\nFixes to remove unused imports are safe, except in `__init__.py` files.\n\nApplying fixes to `__init__.py` files is currently in preview. The fix offered depends on the\ntype of the unused import. Ruff will suggest a safe fix to export first-party imports with\neither a redundant alias or, if already present in the file, an `__all__` entry. If multiple\n`__all__` declarations are present, Ruff will not offer a fix. Ruff will suggest an unsafe fix\nto remove third-party and standard library imports -- the fix is unsafe because the module's\ninterface changes.\n\n## Example\n\n```python\nimport numpy as np # unused import\n\n\ndef area(radius):\n return 3.14 * radius**2\n```\n\nUse instead:\n\n```python\ndef area(radius):\n return 3.14 * radius**2\n```\n\nTo check the availability of a module, use `importlib.util.find_spec`:\n\n```python\nfrom importlib.util import find_spec\n\nif find_spec(\"numpy\") is not None:\n print(\"numpy is installed\")\nelse:\n print(\"numpy is not installed\")\n```\n\n## Preview\nWhen [preview](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/preview/) is enabled,\nthe criterion for determining whether an import is first-party\nis stricter, which could affect the suggested fix. See [this FAQ section](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/faq/#how-does-ruff-determine-which-of-my-imports-are-first-party-third-party-etc) for more details.\n\n## Options\n- `lint.ignore-init-module-imports`\n- `lint.pyflakes.allowed-unused-imports`\n\n## References\n- [Python documentation: `import`](https://docs.python.org/3/reference/simple_stmts.html#the-import-statement)\n- [Python documentation: `importlib.util.find_spec`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/importlib.html#importlib.util.find_spec)\n- [Typing documentation: interface conventions](https://typing.python.org/en/latest/source/libraries.html#library-interface-public-and-private-symbols)\n"
"text": "## What it does\nChecks for unused imports.\n\n## Why is this bad?\nUnused imports add a performance overhead at runtime, and risk creating\nimport cycles. They also increase the cognitive load of reading the code.\n\nIf an import statement is used to check for the availability or existence\nof a module, consider using `importlib.util.find_spec` instead.\n\nIf an import statement is used to re-export a symbol as part of a module's\npublic interface, consider using a \"redundant\" import alias, which\ninstructs Ruff (and other tools) to respect the re-export, and avoid\nmarking it as unused, as in:\n\n```python\nfrom module import member as member\n```\n\nAlternatively, you can use `__all__` to declare a symbol as part of the module's\ninterface, as in:\n\n```python\n# __init__.py\nimport some_module\n\n__all__ = [\"some_module\"]\n```\n\n## Fix safety\n\nFixes to remove unused imports are safe, except in `__init__.py` files.\n\nApplying fixes to `__init__.py` files is currently in preview. The fix offered depends on the\ntype of the unused import. Ruff will suggest a safe fix to export first-party imports with\neither a redundant alias or, if already present in the file, an `__all__` entry. If multiple\n`__all__` declarations are present, Ruff will not offer a fix. Ruff will suggest an unsafe fix\nto remove third-party and standard library imports -- the fix is unsafe because the module's\ninterface changes.\n\n## Example\n\n```python\nimport numpy as np # unused import\n\n\ndef area(radius):\n return 3.14 * radius**2\n```\n\nUse instead:\n\n```python\ndef area(radius):\n return 3.14 * radius**2\n```\n\nTo check the availability of a module, use `importlib.util.find_spec`:\n\n```python\nfrom importlib.util import find_spec\n\nif find_spec(\"numpy\") is not None:\n print(\"numpy is installed\")\nelse:\n print(\"numpy is not installed\")\n```\n\n## Preview\nWhen [preview](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/preview/) is enabled,\nthe criterion for determining whether an import is first-party\nis stricter, which could affect the suggested fix. See [this FAQ section](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/faq/#how-does-ruff-determine-which-of-my-imports-are-first-party-third-party-etc) for more details.\n\n## Options\n- `lint.ignore-init-module-imports`\n- `lint.pyflakes.allowed-unused-imports`\n\n## References\n- [Python documentation: `import`](https://docs.python.org/3/reference/simple_stmts.html#the-import-statement)\n- [Python documentation: `importlib.util.find_spec`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/importlib.html#importlib.util.find_spec)\n- [Typing documentation: interface conventions](https://typing.python.org/en/latest/spec/distributing.html#library-interface-public-and-private-symbols)\n"
},
"help": {
"text": "`{name}` imported but unused; consider using `importlib.util.find_spec` to test for availability"
@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ E20.py:23:11: E202 [*] Whitespace before ']'
23 | spam(ham[1 ], {eggs: 2})
| ^ E202
24 | #: E202:1:23
25 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2} )
25 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2} )
|
= help: Remove whitespace before ']'
@@ -67,10 +67,10 @@ E20.py:25:23: E202 [*] Whitespace before ')'
|
23 | spam(ham[1 ], {eggs: 2})
24 | #: E202:1:23
25 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2} )
| ^^ E202
25 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2} )
| ^^^^ E202
26 | #: E202:1:22
27 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2 })
27 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2 })
|
= help: Remove whitespace before ')'
@@ -86,12 +86,12 @@ E20.py:25:23: E202 [*] Whitespace before ')'
E20.py:27:22: E202 [*] Whitespace before '}'
|
25 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2} )
25 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2} )
26 | #: E202:1:22
27 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2 })
| ^^^ E202
27 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2 })
| ^^^^ E202
28 | #: E202:1:11
29 | spam(ham[1 ], {eggs: 2})
29 | spam(ham[1 ], {eggs: 2})
|
= help: Remove whitespace before '}'
@@ -107,10 +107,10 @@ E20.py:27:22: E202 [*] Whitespace before '}'
E20.py:29:11: E202 [*] Whitespace before ']'
|
27 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2 })
27 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2 })
28 | #: E202:1:11
29 | spam(ham[1 ], {eggs: 2})
| ^^ E202
29 | spam(ham[1 ], {eggs: 2})
| ^^^^ E202
30 | #: Okay
31 | spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2})
|
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