On Thu, Jan 22, 2015 at 3:08 PM, Ian Kelly <ian.g.ke...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Thu, Jan 22, 2015 at 2:56 PM, Emile van Sebille <em...@fenx.com> wrote: >> I've been lightly scanning and following the PEP 484 discussion, and one >> point I don't think I've seen mentioned is how you might hint a function >> that accepts different types, eg: >> >> def adder(a,b): return a+b >> >> This is one of the pythonic idioms that help with polymorphic functions. Is >> there a proposal for providing hinting for these? > > You can use TypeVar for that. > > T = TypeVar('T') > > def adder(a: T, b: T) -> T: > return a + b > > I'm not thrilled about having to actually declare T in this sort of > situation, but I don't have a better proposal.
Hmm, but also that hinting doesn't cover cases like adder(12, 37.5) where two different types can be passed, and the return type could be either. I think for full generality you would just have to forgo hinting on this function. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list