I'm unsure if this question belongs on Code Review or Stack Overflow.
Another developer told me that I should consider adding type hints to my open source project WordHoard.
I have never used type hints before and the documentation doesn't seem intuitive. So I need to guidance on how to implement this functionality in my code.
I've started looking at adding it some low level code pieces first.
For example:
from typing import AnyStr, Dict def colorized_text(r: int, g: int, b: int, text: str) -> AnyStr: """ This function provides error messages color. For example: rgb(255, 0, 0) is displayed as the color red rgb(0, 255, 0) is displayed as the color green :param r: red color value :param g: green color value :param b: below color value :param text: text to colorized :return: string of colorized text """ return f"\033[38;2;{r};{g};{b}m{text}\033[0m" Are type hints implemented correctly in the function colorized_text?
Here is another code example.
from typing import Optional temporary_dict_antonyms = {} def cache_antonyms(word: str) -> [bool, str]: item_to_check = word if item_to_check in temporary_dict_antonyms.keys(): values = temporary_dict_antonyms.get(item_to_check) return True, list(sorted(set(values))) else: return False, None def insert_word_cache_antonyms(word: str, values: list[str]) -> None: if word in temporary_dict_antonyms: deduplicated_values = set(values) - set(temporary_dict_antonyms.get(word)) temporary_dict_antonyms[word].extend(deduplicated_values) else: values = [value.strip() for value in values] temporary_dict_antonyms[word] = values How do I implement type hints correctly in the second example?
Thanks in advance for any guidance!
.append(values). It seems more likely you intended.extend(values), leading to a single flat list of antonyms, rather than a nested list structure. \$\endgroup\$