I was asked recently what this means in Python:
>>> char : str
I had no idea. I checked the docs and there isn't anything like that. One suggestion was that it is static type declaration, but there is absolutely nothing in the docs about that either.
With the above, if I
>>> type(char) it fails
If I >>> char : str = 'abc' it works, and the results of type(char) is <class: str>. It can't be static declaration though, because I can >>> char : str = 4 and type(char) becomes <class: int>.
What does that mean?
You are looking at an annotation for a variable. The hint is moved to the __annotations__ mapping:
>>> char: str
>>> __annotations__
{'char': <class 'str'>}
Variable annotations are there to support third-party tooling, such as type checkers; the syntax is new in Python 3.6.
See PEP 526 -- Syntax for Variable Annotations, and What's new in Python 3.6:
Just as for function annotations, the Python interpreter does not attach any particular meaning to variable annotations and only stores them in the
__annotations__attribute of a class or module.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With