This package contains type stubs and a custom mypy plugin to provide more precise static types and type inference for Django framework. Django uses some Python "magic" that makes having precise types for some code patterns problematic. This is why we need this project. The final goal is to be able to get precise types for most common patterns.
pip install django-stubsSee Configutation section to get started.
To make mypy happy, you will need to add:
[mypy]
plugins =
mypy_django_plugin.main
[mypy.plugins.django-stubs]
django_settings_module = "myproject.settings"in your mypy.ini or setup.cfg file.
Two things happeining here:
- We need to explicitly list our plugin to be loaded by
mypy - Our plugin also requires
djangosettings module (what you put intoDJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULEvariable) to be specified
This fully working typed boilerplate can serve you as an example.
We rely on different django and mypy versions:
| django-stubs | mypy version | django version | python version |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.3.0 | 0.750 | 2.2.x | ^3.6 |
| 1.2.0 | 0.730 | 2.2.x | ^3.6 |
| 1.1.0 | 0.720 | 2.2.x | ^3.6 |
| 0.12.x | old semantic analyzer (<0.711), dmypy support | 2.1.x | ^3.6 |
No, it is not. We are indendepent from Django at the moment. There's a proposal to merge our project into the Django itself. You show your support by linking the PR.
Yes, it is! This project does not affect your runtime at all.
It only affects mypy type checking process.
But, it does not make any sense to use this project without mypy.
Current implementation uses Django runtime to extract models information, so it will crash, if your installed apps or models.py is not correct. For this same reason, you cannot use reveal_type inside global scope of any Python file that will be executed for django.setup().
In other words, if your manage.py runserver crashes, mypy will crash too.
You can also run mypy with --tb
option to get extra information about the error.
You can get a TypeError: 'type' object is not subscriptable
when you will try to use QuerySet[MyModel] or Manager[MyModel].
This happens because Django classes do not support __class_getitem__ magic method.
You can use strings instead: 'QuerySet[MyModel]' and 'Manager[MyModel', this way it will work as a type for mypy and as a regular str in runtime.
Currently we are working on providing __class_getitem__ to the classes where we need them.
You can subclass standard request like so:
from django.http import HttpRequest
from my_user_app.models import MyUser
class MyRequest(HttpRequest):
user: MyUserAnd then use MyRequest instead of standard HttpRequest inside your project.
awesome-python-typing- Awesome list of all typing-related things in Python.djangorestframework-stubs- Stubs for Django REST Framework.pytest-mypy-plugins-pytestplugin that we use for testingmypystubs and plugins.wemake-django-template- Create new typed Django projects in seconds.
We have Gitter here: https://gitter.im/mypy-django/Lobby
If you think you have more generic typing issue, please refer to https://github.com/python/mypy and their Gitter.