How can I tell PyCharm what type a parameter is expected to be?

Joe White picture Joe White · Jun 12, 2011 · Viewed 36.6k times · Source

When it comes to constructors, and assignments, and method calls, the PyCharm IDE is pretty good at analyzing my source code and figuring out what type each variable should be. I like it when it's right, because it gives me good code-completion and parameter info, and it gives me warnings if I try to access an attribute that doesn't exist.

But when it comes to parameters, it knows nothing. The code-completion dropdowns can't show anything, because they don't know what type the parameter will be. The code analysis can't look for warnings.

class Person:
    def __init__(self, name, age):
        self.name = name
        self.age = age

peasant = Person("Dennis", 37)
# PyCharm knows that the "peasant" variable is of type Person
peasant.dig_filth()   # shows warning -- Person doesn't have a dig_filth method

class King:
    def repress(self, peasant):
        # PyCharm has no idea what type the "peasant" parameter should be
        peasant.knock_over()   # no warning even though knock_over doesn't exist

King().repress(peasant)
# Even if I call the method once with a Person instance, PyCharm doesn't
# consider that to mean that the "peasant" parameter should always be a Person

This makes a certain amount of sense. Other call sites could pass anything for that parameter. But if my method expects a parameter to be of type, say, pygame.Surface, I'd like to be able to indicate that to PyCharm somehow, so it can show me all of Surface's attributes in its code-completion dropdown, and highlight warnings if I call the wrong method, and so on.

Is there a way I can give PyCharm a hint, and say "psst, this parameter is supposed to be of type X"? (Or perhaps, in the spirit of dynamic languages, "this parameter is supposed to quack like an X"? I'd be fine with that.)


EDIT: CrazyCoder's answer, below, does the trick. For any newcomers like me who want the quick summary, here it is:

class King:
    def repress(self, peasant):
        """
        Exploit the workers by hanging on to outdated imperialist dogma which
        perpetuates the economic and social differences in our society.

        @type peasant: Person
        @param peasant: Person to repress.
        """
        peasant.knock_over()   # Shows a warning. And there was much rejoicing.

The relevant part is the @type peasant: Person line of the docstring.

If you also go to File > Settings > Python Integrated Tools and set "Docstring format" to "Epytext", then PyCharm's View > Quick Documentation Lookup will pretty-print the parameter information instead of just printing all the @-lines as-is.

Answer

CrazyCoder picture CrazyCoder · Jun 12, 2011

Yes, you can use special documentation format for methods and their parameters so that PyCharm can know the type. Recent PyCharm version supports most common doc formats.

For example, PyCharm extracts types from @param style comments.

See also reStructuredText and docstring conventions (PEP 257).

Another option is Python 3 annotations.

Please refer to the PyCharm documentation section for more details and samples.