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Some differences between Python 3.6 and 3.8 #103

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mitar opened this issue Sep 30, 2021 · 3 comments
Open

Some differences between Python 3.6 and 3.8 #103

mitar opened this issue Sep 30, 2021 · 3 comments

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@mitar
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mitar commented Sep 30, 2021

I know that Python 3.7/3.8 support is still in progress and I was testing the master branch and found some differences so I am reporting them to maybe use them as unit tests. With Python 3.6:

>>> import typing
>>> from pytypes import type_util
>>> type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type({}), typing.Union[typing.Dict, type(None)])
True
>>> type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type({}), typing.Union[typing.Dict[str, typing.Any], type(None)])
True
>>> type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type({}), typing.Dict[str, typing.Any])
True

Python 3.8:

>>> import typing
>>> from pytypes import type_util
>>> type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type({}), typing.Union[typing.Dict, type(None)])
True
>>> type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type({}), typing.Union[typing.Dict[str, typing.Any], type(None)])
False
>>> type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type({}), typing.Dict[str, typing.Any])
True
@Stewori
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Stewori commented Oct 1, 2021

Definitely, the Python 3.6 variant looks correct to me. I will consider this a proper bug to be fixed.

@mitar
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mitar commented Oct 1, 2021

Another set. Python 3.6:

>>> import typing
>>> from pytypes import type_util
>>> class Foo(dict):
...   pass
... 
>>> type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type({}), dict)
True
>>> type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type({}), typing.Dict)
True
>>> type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type(Foo()), typing.Dict)
True

Python 3.8:

>>> import typing
>>> from pytypes import type_util
>>> class Foo(dict):
...   pass
... 
>>> type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type({}), dict)
True
>>> type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type({}), typing.Dict)
True
>>> type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type(Foo()), typing.Dict)
False

@mitar
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mitar commented Oct 2, 2021

Another difference. It should be True, but on Python 3.8 returns False.

type_util._issubclass(type_util.deep_type([{'cc': 1, 'dd': 2}, {'ee': 1, 'ff': 2}]), typing.Sequence[object])

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