I know what I am asking is rather niche, but it has been bugging me for quite a while. Suppose I have the following function:
def foo(return_more: bool):
....
if return_more:
return data, more_data
return data
You can imagine it is a function that may return more data if given a flag.
How should I typehint this function? When I use the function in both ways
data = foo(False)
data, more_data = foo(True)
either the first or the 2nd statement would say that the function cannot be assigned due to wrong size of return tuple.
Is having variable signature an anti-pattern? Is Python’s typehinting mechanism not powerful enough and thus I am forced to ignore this error?
Edit:
Thanks for all the suggestions.
I was enlightened by this suggestion about the existence of overload
and this solution fit my requirements perfectly
from typing import overload, Literal
@overload
def foo(return_more: Literal[False]) -> Data: ...
@overload
def foo(return_more: Literal[True]) -> tuple[Data, OtherData]: ...
def foo(return_more: bool) -> Data | tuple[Data, OtherData]:
....
if return_more:
return data, more_data
return data
a = foo(False)
a,b = foo(True)
a,b = foo(False) # correctly identified as illegal
In my opinion, it doesn’t. I’d rather have
foo()
anddetailed_foo()
overfoo(detailed: bool = False)
.Designing APIs can be hard at times. You have to shift your view to the person that will being using the code instead of the person implementing the code. There is also potential down side of returning a tuple or just a single thing if the single thing shares some of the same API as a tuple. Say the return type is
Union[str, tuple[str, str]
. Nowresult[0]
can either be the first string or the first character of the returned string depending on how the function was called. This could lead to the failure happening farther away from where the bug is, which makes debugging harder. That being said, if you do want to proceed this way,overload
withLiteral[True]
is the correct way to type this as mentioned in other comments.I also don’t think it’s overkill to extract functionality just for 2 functions. I often do that even when it is only used in one function. Maybe the number of lines to implement the block starts to make the primary function too long. Or the logic is a bit complicated, so it easier to give it a clearer name.