Python IDLE extension to perform mypy analysis on an open file
This IDLE extension hooks into the mypy daemon to type check the currently open file or provide a function signature suggestion for the nearest function to the top from the current input cursor location. When type checking the currently open file with the "Type Check File" command, it will add comments to your code wherever mypy had something to say about about that line. You can remove type comments from the currently selected text with the "Remove Type Comments" command. Additionally, you can jump to the next comment this extension created in your file with the "Find Next Type Comment" command. Finally, you can add an inferred function signature to your file with the "Suggest Signature" command when you are close by a function definition.
Note: On use, creates folder mypy
within the idle user directory.
On Linux systems, this is usually ~/.idlerc/mypy
.
- Go to terminal and install with
pip install idlemypyextension[user]
. - Run command
idleuserextend; idlemypyextension
. You should see the following output:Config should be good! Config should be good!
. - Open IDLE, go to
Options
->Configure IDLE
->Extensions
. If everything went well, alongsideZzDummy
there should be and option calledidlemypyextension
. This is where you can configure how idlemypyextension works.
- Go to terminal and install with
pip install idlemypyextension
. - Run command
idlemypyextension
. You will likely see a message sayingidlemypyextension not in system registered extensions!
. Run the command given to add idlemypyextension to your system's IDLE extension config file. - Again run command
idlemypyextension
. This time, you should see the following output:Config should be good!
. - Open IDLE, go to
Options
->Configure IDLE
->Extensions
. If everything went well, alongsideZzDummy
there should be and option calledidlemypyextension
. This is where you can configure how idlemypyextension works.
action_max_sec
controls how long an action is allowed to take at most,
in seconds. Default is "None".
For daemon_flags
, see mypy --help
for a list of valid flags.
This extension sets the following flags to be able to work properly:
--hide-error-context
--no-color-output
--show-absolute-path
--no-error-summary
--soft-error-limit=-1
--show-traceback
--cache-dir="~/.idlerc/mypy"
If you add the --show-column-numbers
flag to daemon_flags
, when using the
"Type Check File" command, it will add a helpful little ^
sign
in a new line below the location of the mypy message that provided a column
number, as long as that comment wouldn't break your file's indentation too much.
If you add the --show-error-codes
flag to daemon_flags
, when using the
"Type Check File" command, when it puts mypy's comments in your code, it will
tell you what type of error that comment is. For example, it would change the
error comment
# types: error: Incompatible types in assignment (expression has type "str", variable has type "int")
to
# types: assignment error: Incompatible types in assignment (expression has type "str", variable has type "int")
search_wrap
toggles weather searching for next type comment will wrap
around or not.
suggest_replace
toggles weather Suggest Signature will replace the
existing function definition or just add a comment with the suggested
definition
timeout_mins
controls how long the mypy daemon will time out after,
in minutes.
I kept running into cases a lot where CI systems generate mypy error logs, and
I needed to fix those errors with my local copy. If you copy all the mypy
errors into a file, say error.txt
, you can have idlemypyextension annotate
all of those files with a command like this:
idlemypyextension error.txt
which will open a blank IDLE window, hook into idlemypyextension
, have it
add annotations to all files referenced in error log file, and then close
that temporary blank window, leaving all the files with errors still open.
- Source Code - https://github.com/CoolCat467/idlemypyextension.git
- Issues - https://github.com/CoolCat467/idlemypyextension/issues
Code and documentation are available according to the GNU General Public License v3.0 (see LICENSE).