Welcome! Mypy is a community project that aims to work for a wide range of Python users and Python codebases. If you're trying mypy on your Python code, your experience and what you can contribute are important to the project's success.
Everyone participating in the Mypy community, and in particular in our issue tracker, pull requests, and chat, is expected to treat other people with respect and more generally to follow the guidelines articulated in the Python Community Code of Conduct.
Run the following:
# Clone the mypy repository
git clone https://github.com/python/mypy.git
# Enter the repository
cd mypy
# Create then activate a virtual environment
python3 -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
# Install the test requirements and the project
python3 -m pip install -r test-requirements.txt
python3 -m pip install -e .
hash -r
Once setup, you should be able to run tests:
python3 runtests.py
To use mypy to check mypy's own code, run:
python3 runtests.py self
# or equivalently:
python3 -m mypy --config-file mypy_self_check.ini -p mypy
You can also use tox
to run tests, for instance:
tox -e py
The easiest way to run a single test is:
pytest -n0 -k 'test_name'
There's more useful information on writing and running tests here
If you're looking for things to help with, browse our issue tracker!
In particular, look for:
You do not need to ask for permission to work on any of these issues. Just fix the issue yourself, try to add a unit test and open a pull request.
To get help fixing a specific issue, it's often best to comment on the issue itself. You're much more likely to get help if you provide details about what you've tried and where you've looked (maintainers tend to help those who help themselves). gitter can also be a good place to ask for help.
Interactive debuggers like pdb
and ipdb
are really useful for getting
started with the mypy codebase. This is a
useful tutorial.
It's also extremely easy to get started contributing to our sister project typeshed that provides type stubs for libraries. This is a great way to become familiar with type syntax.
Even more excellent than a good bug report is a fix for a bug, or the implementation of a much-needed new feature. We'd love to have your contributions.
We use the usual GitHub pull-request flow, which may be familiar to you if you've contributed to other projects on GitHub. For the mechanics, see our git and GitHub workflow help page, or GitHub's own documentation.
Anyone interested in Mypy may review your code. One of the Mypy core developers will merge your pull request when they think it's ready.
If your change will be a significant amount of work to write, we highly recommend starting by opening an issue laying out what you want to do. That lets a conversation happen early in case other contributors disagree with what you'd like to do or have ideas that will help you do it.
The best pull requests are focused, clearly describe what they're for and why they're correct, and contain tests for whatever changes they make to the code's behavior. As a bonus these are easiest for someone to review, which helps your pull request get merged quickly! Standard advice about good pull requests for open-source projects applies; we have our own writeup of this advice.
See also our coding conventions -- which consist mainly of a reference to PEP 8 -- for the code you put in the pull request.
Also, do not squash your commits after you have submitted a pull request, as this erases context during review. We will squash commits when the pull request is merged.
You may also find other pages in the Mypy developer guide helpful in developing your change.
Core developers should follow these rules when processing pull requests:
- Always wait for tests to pass before merging PRs.
- Use "Squash and merge" to merge PRs.
- Delete branches for merged PRs (by core devs pushing to the main repo).
- Edit the final commit message before merging to conform to the following
style (we wish to have a clean
git log
output):- When merging a multi-commit PR make sure that the commit message doesn't contain the local history from the committer and the review history from the PR. Edit the message to only describe the end state of the PR.
- Make sure there is a single newline at the end of the commit message.
This way there is a single empty line between commits in
git log
output. - Split lines as needed so that the maximum line length of the commit message is under 80 characters, including the subject line.
- Capitalize the subject and each paragraph.
- Make sure that the subject of the commit message has no trailing dot.
- Use the imperative mood in the subject line (e.g. "Fix typo in README").
- If the PR fixes an issue, make sure something like "Fixes #xxx." occurs in the body of the message (not in the subject).
- Use Markdown for formatting.