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Difference between defining typing.Dict and dict?


I am practicing using type hints in Python 3.5. One of my colleague uses typing.Dict:

import typing


def change_bandwidths(new_bandwidths: typing.Dict,
                      user_id: int,
                      user_name: str) -> bool:
    print(new_bandwidths, user_id, user_name)
    return False


def my_change_bandwidths(new_bandwidths: dict,
                         user_id: int,
                         user_name: str) ->bool:
    print(new_bandwidths, user_id, user_name)
    return True


def main():
    my_id, my_name = 23, "Tiras"
    simple_dict = {"Hello": "Moon"}
    change_bandwidths(simple_dict, my_id, my_name)
    new_dict = {"new": "energy source"}
    my_change_bandwidths(new_dict, my_id, my_name)

if __name__ == "__main__":
    main()

Both of them work just fine, there doesn't appear to be a difference.

I have read the typing module documentation.

Between typing.Dict or dict which one should I use in the program?


Solution

  • There is no real difference between using a plain typing.Dict and dict, no.

    However, typing.Dict is a Generic type * that lets you specify the type of the keys and values too, making it more flexible:

    def change_bandwidths(new_bandwidths: typing.Dict[str, str],
                          user_id: int,
                          user_name: str) -> bool:
    

    As such, it could well be that at some point in your project lifetime you want to define the dictionary argument a little more precisely, at which point expanding typing.Dict to typing.Dict[key_type, value_type] is a 'smaller' change than replacing dict.

    You can make this even more generic by using Mapping or MutableMapping types here; since your function doesn't need to alter the mapping, I'd stick with Mapping. A dict is one mapping, but you could create other objects that also satisfy the mapping interface, and your function might well still work with those:

    def change_bandwidths(new_bandwidths: typing.Mapping[str, str],
                          user_id: int,
                          user_name: str) -> bool:
    

    Now you are clearly telling other users of this function that your code won't actually alter the new_bandwidths mapping passed in.

    Your actual implementation is merely expecting an object that is printable. That may be a test implementation, but as it stands your code would continue to work if you used new_bandwidths: typing.Any, because any object in Python is printable.


    *: Note: If you are using Python 3.7 or newer, you can use dict as a generic type if you start your module with from __future__ import annotations, and as of Python 3.9, dict (as well as other standard containers) supports being used as generic type even without that directive.