I am using mypy
to check my Python code.
I have a class where I set dynamically some attributes and mypy
keep on complaining about it:
error:"Toto" has no attribute "age"
This is my code:
class Toto:
def __init__(self, name:str) -> None:
self.name = name
for attr in ['age', 'height']:
setattr(self, attr, 0)
toto = Toto("Toto")
toto.age = 10 # "Toto" has no attribute "age" :(
Obviously, there could be 3 ways to solve the issue
- Ignoring the issue with
# type: ignore
:toto.age = 10 # type: ignore #...
- Using
setattr
to set theage
oftoto
:setattr(toto, "age", 10)
- Setting the attributes explicitly (
self.age = 0
...)
However, I am looking for a more elegant and systematic way at the class level.
Any suggestion?
I don't follow mypy well enough to know whether this is (still, or ever was) the ideal work around, but this issue and this part of the cheatsheet indicate that something like:
Will allow you to do what you're doing without mypy complaining (which it does, just tested).
Any
could be more restrictive, but the types will be checked on bothsetattr()
and "traditional"obj.attr = ...
calls, so heads up.