kokada 4 hours ago

From this example:

    lazy from typing import Iterator

    def stream_events(...) -> Iterator[str]:
        while True:
            yield blocking_get_event(...)

    events = stream_events(...)

    for event in events:
        consume(event)
Do we finally have "lazy imports" in Python? I think I missed this change. Is this also something from Python 3.15 or earlier?
  • kzrdude 2 hours ago

    What benefit does the lazy import have here - if we use the value in a type hint at module scope anyway? Would that require Deferred evaluation of annotations -- which I don't think are enabled by default?

    • js2 an hour ago

      Type annotations are lazily evaluated by moving them behind a special annotations scope as of 3.14:

      https://peps.python.org/pep-0649/

      https://docs.python.org/3/reference/compound_stmts.html#anno...

      With 3.15, using lazy typing imports is more or less an alternative to putting such imports behind an "if TYPE_CHECKING" guard.

      • kzrdude an hour ago

        Ah, thanks for the update. My only check before asking was to check if the future feature for annotations had been enabled by default yet. It has then effectively been abandoned instead, I guess.

        • js2 18 minutes ago

          Yup, "from __future__ import annotations" will eventually be removed:

          > from __future__ import annotations (PEP 563) will continue to exist with its current behavior at least until Python 3.13 reaches its end-of-life. Subsequently, it will be deprecated and eventually removed.

  • karpetrosyan 3 hours ago

    Note that you can work around it by implementing `def __getattr__(name: str) -> object:` at the module level on earlier Python versions

    • saghm 3 hours ago

      Somehow I have no trouble imagining this being used as a rationale to avoid unnecessary "magic" to the language for years

    • wrmsr 2 hours ago

      [dead]

  • boxed 4 hours ago

    Yes, 3.15+

  • rad120 4 hours ago

    Python is such a weird language. Lazy imports are a bandaid for AI code base monstrosities with 1000 imports (1% of which are probably Shai Hulud now).

    And now even type imports are apparently so slow that you have to disable them if unused during the normal untyped execution.

    If Instagram or others wants a professional language, they should switch to Go or PHP instead of shoehorning strange features into a language that wasn't built for their use cases.

    • stingraycharles 4 hours ago

      > Python is such a weird language. Lazy imports are a bandaid for AI code base monstrosities with 1000 imports

      Just because you don’t like a feature doesn’t mean it’s because of AI and bad code.

      • sigmoid10 4 hours ago

        I think this is just a natural consequence of an easy-to-use package system. The exact same story as with node. If you don't want lots of imports, don't make it so damn easy to pile them into projects. I'm frankly surprised we still see so few supply chain attacks, even though they picked up their cadence dramatically.

        • saghm 3 hours ago

          This seems a lot more due to an import running arbitrary code because stuff can happen in the top-level of a module rather than only happening in functions. From what I can tell, it seems pretty common for dynamically typed languages and pretty much entirely absent from statically typed ones, which tend to have a main function that everything else happens inside transitively. I guess this makes it easy if what you're writing is something that runs with no dependencies, but it's a pretty terrible experience as soon as you try to introduce the concept of a library.

          • kokada 3 hours ago

            > it seems pretty common for dynamically typed languages and pretty much entirely absent from statically typed ones

            Counter-example is Go and init() function.

            • saghm 2 hours ago

              Interesting, I had no idea that existed! I still think there's a a difference between "here's a hook you can use to run stuff earlier" and "importing any module is fundamentally the same as running it as a script unless the module happens to use a special conditional to wrap stuff inside of" though (and I say this as someone who doesn't go out of his way to defend Go design decisions)

            • assbuttbuttass 21 minutes ago

              Also C++/Java static initialization, C# static constructors, or Rust global variable initialization, ...

              Most languages have this feature Afaik

        • stevesimmons 3 hours ago

          What would your alternative look like?

      • xtajv 2 hours ago

        Too much syntactic sugar causes cancer of the semicolon.

      • tremon 2 hours ago

        True, but this is yet another code path that isn't exercised until specific conditions happen. That means even more latent application behaviour can go undetected by unit testing and security profiling until the moon is in the right phase, which is a boon for submarine attacks.

    • novov 3 hours ago

      Empirically, I have used the current accepted way to do lazy imports (import statement inside a function) before AI coding was even a mainstream thing, for personal code that sometimes needs a heavy import and sometimes doesn’t.

      The lazy statement would be an improvement as it allows one to see all the imports at the top where you expect them to be.

      • afH12 3 hours ago

        As a now deleted comment pointed out, lazy imports had been requested forever. They were rejected forever and were accepted just when BigCorps wanted them.

        Python-dev now is paid to shore up the failed Instagram stack.

        • Daishiman 20 minutes ago

          It was accepted just as multiple large corporations with competent teams of internal tool departments ended up forking the interpreter to support lazy imports and demonstrated empirically that the idea has merit.

        • brookst 3 hours ago

          I too am outraged that a product would prioritize its biggest users.

          • saghm 3 hours ago

            Is the biggest user larger than the combined set of individual users who had asked for (or would benefit from) the same thing? I honestly don't know, but I don't think that things are always as simple as you're implying in a world where we have the collective action problem.

            • brookst 2 hours ago

              If you’re asking some some kind of abstract moral value sense, I have idea.

              If you’re asking whether project leads give more weight to a single, tangible, vocal stakeholder than they do to unknown numbers of anonymous and lightly-engaged stakeholders? Yes.

              • WorldMaker a few seconds ago

                Not to mention when the single, tangible, vocal stakeholder can also be asked to be responsible for documentation (PEPs, etc) and PRs. Especially in open source there is a huge difference between "a lot of people asked about this" and "one person asked about this, but was passionate enough about it and open enough to following the process and the feedback loops to champion it all the way across the finish line".

              • saghm 2 hours ago

                I mean, yes, demonstrably, the phenomenon you're describing happens. Your previous comment seems pretty sarcastically dismissing the idea that someone could disagree with this being a good thing though, and I was making a counterargument against the underlying opinion that seemed apparent.

    • formerly_proven 3 hours ago

      On most unix-likes all "imports" via shared libraries (e.g. in C / C++) are lazy by default.

JohnKemeny 4 hours ago

> I've left this one to the bonus section because I've never used set operations on Counters and I'm finding it extremely hard to think of a use case for xor specifically. But I do appreciate the devs adding it for completeness.

Check out symmetric difference

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symmetric_difference

  • qsort 3 hours ago

    Yeah, but applied to counters it would be the symmetric difference between multisets, which doesn't have a natural definition. If I understood the proposal they'd be defining it as absolute value of the difference of the counts, which isn't even associative.

    If they only considered parities it could be interpreted as addition in F_2, which is more natural, but I'd still agree that it's hard to see how you'd use something like this in practice.

brianwawok 4 hours ago

I was so into Python for 10 years, was enjoyable to work in. But have deleted 100k+ lines this year already moving them to faster languages in a post AI codebot world. Mostly moving to go these days.

  • stuaxo 4 hours ago

    This is straightforward in the first instance, but how do you see maintenance of those projects going forward - especially adding more complex features ?

    I can see one way forward being to prototype them in python and convert.

  • BOOSTERHIDROGEN 3 hours ago

    Interested in why you'd use Python in the first place? Advice for someone who knows nothing about programming - what would you suggest?

    • IshKebab 2 hours ago

      IMO the main reasons people use Python are:

      1. The very first steps are quite simple. Hello world is literally just `print("hello world")`. In other languages it can be a lot more complex.

      2. It got a reputation as a beginner-friendly language as a result.

      3. It has a "REPL" which means you can type code into a prompt and it will execute it interactively. This is very helpful for research (think AI) where you're trying stuff out and want to plot graphs and so on.

      IMO it is undeservedly popular, or at least was. Wind back 10 years to when it was rapidly gaining mindshare:

      1. While "hello world" is simple, if you went further to more complex programs you would hit two roadblocks: a) the lack of static type checking means large programs are difficult to maintain, and b) it's really really slow.

      2. While the language is reasonable, the tooling (how you install packages, manage the code and so on) was eye-bleedingly abysmal.

      3. While the REPL did technically exist, it was really bare bones. It couldn't even handle things like pasting code into it if the code contained blank lines (which it usually does).

      However since it has become arguably the most popular language in the world, a lot of people have been forced to use it and so it is actually getting quite decent now. It has decent static types (even if lots of people still don't use them), the REPL is actually decent now (this changed very recently), and there's a new third party tool called `uv` to manage your code that is actually good.

      The biggest issue with it now is that it's still horrifically slow (around 50-200x slower than "fast" languages like C++, Rust etc). It is pretty unlikely that that will ever change. People always try to excuse this by saying Python is a "glue" language and you just use it to connect components written in faster languages, but a) that's pure "you're holding it wrong", and b) that only works in some cases where there are nicely separated "slow bits" that can be moved to another language. That's the case for AI for example, where it's all numerical, but for lots of things it isn't. Mercurial was a competitor to Git that was written in Python and lost partly because it was way too slow. They've started writing parts in Rust but it took them 10 years to even start doing that and by then it was far too late.

      > what would you suggest?

      It really depends on what you want to make. I would pick something to make first and then pick the language based on that. Something like:

      * AI: Python for sure. Make sure you use uv and Pyright.

      * Web-based games: Typescript

      * Web sites: Typescript, or maybe Go.

      * Desktop GUI: Tbh I'd still use C++ with QtWidgets. Getting a bit old-school now tbf.

      Also Rust is the best language of them all, but I dunno if I'd pick it as a beginner unless you really know you want to get into programming.

      • mixmastamyk 34 minutes ago

        ptpython has existed for a decade, maybe two, and python is high level, more readable than most languages. Exec speed hasn’t mattered in my near thirty years of using it for business and prototyping tasks which it promoted early.

        Yes it strains at the big to huge project end, not recommended to take it there. Still there are better tools to help now.

      • 1_08iu 27 minutes ago

        I think "Python is slow" is reductive and frankly just as useful as saying "Python begins with a 'P'". The story is more complicated than simply speed of execution.

        Choosing a language is a game of trade-offs: potentially slower execution in return for faster development time, for example. If your team is already familiar with Ruby, will asking them to write a project in Rust necessarily result in a better product? Maybe, but it will almost certainly take much longer.

        Anyway, how many Python programs are actually "too slow"? Most of the time, Python is fast enough, even if heavy computation is offloaded to other languages.

        As for Rust being the best language of them all, that's, like, your opinion, man.

  • sinpif 2 hours ago

    I'm still on the lookout for a comprehensive Django-like web framework for go. That would be an instant hit for me.

    • pennomi an hour ago

      Same here. Django is my last holdout for Python. Everything new is go.

  • physicsguy 4 hours ago

    Go is terrible for scientific/ML work though, the libraries just aren't there. The wrapping C API story is weak too even with LLMs to assist.

    Try and write a signal processing thing with filters, windowing, overlap, etc. - there's no easy way to do it at all with the libraries that exist.

    • LtWorf 4 hours ago

      I think the purpose of go is to write CRUD. Stray from that and you're on your own.

  • deppep 4 hours ago

    i don’t really see it this way. the value of a token in Python is much higher than it is in lower-level language

  • shankysingh 4 hours ago

    Thats very intersting, If I may ask was it from professional projects or personal projects?

  • mountainriver 4 hours ago

    Same, I’m not sure how Python survives this outside of machine learning.

    All of our services we were our are significantly faster and more reliable. We used Rust, it wasn’t hard to do

    • prodigycorp 4 hours ago

      the funny thing is that everyone, including myself, posited that python would be the winner of the ai coding wars, because of how much training data there is for it. My experience has been the opposite.

      • tyre 3 hours ago

        I felt the opposite, because Python isn’t a great language. It won because of Google, fast prototyping, and its ML interop (e.g. pandas, numpy), but as a language it’s always been subpar.

        Indentation is a horrible decision (there’s a reason no other language went this way), which led to simple concepts like blocks/lambdas having pretty wild constraints (only one line??)

        Type decoration has been a welcome addition, but too slowly iterated on and the native implementations (mypy) are horribly slow at any meaningful size.

        Concurrency was never good and its GIL+FFI story has boxed it into a long-term pit of sadness.

        I’ve used it for years, but I’m happy to see it go. It didn’t win because it was the best language.

        • zabzonk 3 hours ago

          > there’s a reason no other language went this way)

          Except of course for those that did, Haskell, Fortran for example.

          • bonesss 12 minutes ago

            F# as well, and that tends to exist in parallel with some degree of C# written by the same devs… the indentation enables cleaner, smaller, simpler code function by function.

            It’s pretty ok in Python, but meaningful indentation is amazing with a proper type system and compiler. Clean, consistent, efficient, and ensures working code is easily read and standardized.

            I’m unaware of anyone accepting improperly formatted C# as ‘done’, and would reject any such PR out of hand because of the potential for legibility issues to hide bugs. So: if it were done when 'tis done, then 'twere well it were done by the compiler to save line noise.

        • groundzeros2015 3 hours ago

          I’m always baffled when language complaints come down to syntax

          • Ringz 35 minutes ago

            That’s exactly how I think, too. But at the same time, I like indentation in Python, because I would logically indent in every other language as well. In fact, I find all those semicolons and similar things at the end of each line completely redundant (why should I repeat myself for something the compiler should do) and I hate them. And that’s despite having experience with Modula and 10 years of C++. But when I look at Rust, I find the syntax simply awful. From an ADHD perspective…

        • smallerize 2 hours ago

          Lambdas are intentionally kneecapped in python because Guido van Robson doesn't want to make a functional language. (As in "functional programming", not that it doesn't work.)

          • ciupicri an hour ago

            Guido van Rossum didn't oppose functional programming, but he wanted to keep the language (and the interpreter) simple.

      • rplnt 3 hours ago

        AI benefits from tools to verify its halucinations. That's much easier in a typed and compiled language. Then have a language that can't be monkey patched at runtime and the confidence increases even more.

        If you mean "easy to get something out of it" then yeah, it's great.

      • dkersten 3 hours ago

        Typescript wins in terms of training data IMHO, by which I mean that the training data is large enough that AI does great with TS, and the language is (IMHO) superior to Python in many ways.

        I personally now use a mixture of Typescript and Rust for most things, including AI coding. Its been working quite well. (AI doesn't handle Rust as well as TS, in that the code isn't quite idiomatic, but it does ok)

        • CuriouslyC 3 hours ago

          It turns out that volume of training data isn't the most important thing. Elixir beats Kotlin and C#, which beat pretty much everything else. Kotlin is probably the sweet spot for most things.

          • dkersten an hour ago

            Not the most important thing, but it certainly helps.

      • lexicality 4 hours ago

        a lot of the training data is either for python 2 or just generally very low quality

        • stuaxo 4 hours ago

          The quality issue doesn't seem unique to Python.

          The versioning issue I've seen across libraries that version change in many languages.

          I don't tend to hit Python 2 issues using LLMs with it, but I do hit library things (e.g. Pydantic likes to make changes between libraries - or loads of the libraries used a lot by AI companies).

          • bigfudge 2 hours ago

            I’ve found recent Claude to be much better in this regard. I think a lot rests on the quality of the harness and the work behind the scenes done to RAG up to date docs or search for docs proactively rather than guessing.

            I also don’t have issues with quality of Python generated. It takes a bit of nudging to use list comps and generators rather than imperative forms but it tends to mimic code already in context. So if the codebase is ok, it does do better.

        • prodigycorp 4 hours ago

          That could be it. I still see LLMs fail a set of static typing challenges that I created a couple years ago as a benchmark. Google models still fail it. I wonder if the lack of typing in a lot of the training data makes python harder to reason about?

      • lsbehe 4 hours ago

        The tons of python code would be great training data if there was any consistency across the ecosystem. Yet every project I've touched required me to learn it's unique style. Then I'd imagine they practically poisoned half the training set because python2 is subtly different.

    • LtWorf 4 hours ago

      You can test on the device directly, without needing to recompile to try something.

  • zabzonk 3 hours ago

    Three things I find unlikely about this:

    - You wrote 100K lines of code (I've worked on several large C++ projects that were far smaller)

    - You wrote those lines in Python (surely the whole point of Python is to write less code)

    - You deleted them (never delete anything, isn't this what modern VCS is all about?)

    But whatever floats your boat.

    • dkersten 3 hours ago

      > You deleted them (never delete anything, isn't this what modern VCS is all about?)

      The person said: "deleted 100k+ lines this year already moving them to faster languages"

      Are you saying that when you move code to another language/rewrite in another language, you leave the original languages code in your repo?

      They didn't say they deleted it from their git history. I delete code all the time (doesn't mean its "gone", just that its not in my git head).

      • zabzonk 3 hours ago

        Well, they deleted it from somewhere. As I assumed they were using a VCS I assumed they deleted it from that. Or are they really short of disk space?

        • dkersten an hour ago

          Deleted from the current head/trunk of the repo, ie the deployed code.

          Deleting "from my codebase" doesn't imply deleting it from history or backups. Just that the code isn't present for future edits or deployments.

          The way you're talking, it sounds like you never delete code from your codebase. Do you just comment it out when you change a line to something else or replace a function with a new one? Just add new files?

        • rcxdude 2 hours ago

          In this context I would assume deleting code to mean deleting it from the current version of the software, not removing from the VCS history entirely.

    • throwatdem12311 3 hours ago

      100k lines is tiny what are you on about, especially in the monolithic app sass world where many Fyll stack apps that handle all business ops are probably written with Django.

      Our entire business runs on 300k lines of Ruby (on Rails) and I can keep most of the business logic in my head. I would say our codebase is not exactly “tiny” and just cracking the ceiling into “smal” territory. And comparatively, people probably write even less code in equivalent rails apps to django ones. 100k lines of C++ is miniscule.

      Obviously “deleting code” in this context doesn’t mean purging version control history but the current state of the codebase.

      • zabzonk 3 hours ago

        > 100k lines is tiny

        No, no, it is not, or at least not in my experience (I do not and never have done web development - medium performance C++ code - I don't see how I could write, understand and support 100K lines of code in this area).

        And so, what does your Ruby code actually do?

        • rcxdude 2 hours ago

          Your experience doesn't match mine. I have, mostly solo, and part time, written multiple codebases that on that kind of magnitude (it is about the level where it still will fit in one person's head pretty easily IMO). It doesn't take much to reach that kind of size. Now, if all of it was super dense and subtle code, then yeah, that would be a lot, but in my experience that's usually a pretty small part of any given codebase.

          • zabzonk 2 hours ago

            > in my experience that's usually a pretty small part of any given codebase

            Our experiences differ then. Mine is that almost all of the code I write is directly targeted on the usually quite complex problem I am trying to solve. I don't do boilerplate, for example.

            • rcxdude an hour ago

              I tend not to have much boilerplate (and write abstractions to avoid it), but I do still find there tends to be a lot of supporting code around the 'difficult bits' (TBH, most of the code I write is supporting a small amount of relatively simple but subtle operations, but such is the nature of embedded software). But different codebases are quite different in this regard: this is why such different scales shouldn't be too surprising in different domains.

    • squirrellous 3 hours ago

      Uhm what? All of those things are totally ordinary.

      • zabzonk 3 hours ago

        > All of those things are totally ordinary. reply

        I would need some evidence of that.

armanj 2 hours ago

funny how we may have to wait even longer for llms to pick up this update in their pre-training

sunshine-o 3 hours ago

I am not a python dev but have the utmost respect for the ecosystem.

But damn, with all the supply chain attacks now in the news, could they just make a simple way (for non python insiders) to install python apps without fearing to be infected by a vermin with full access to my $HOME ...

  • surajrmal 2 hours ago

    There is little that they can do short of running the programs in a VM. Linux distros aren't engineered to consider applications as something different from the user running them. You need a completely different security model to achieve that and the Python runtime isn't tackle that.

    • sunshine-o 34 minutes ago

      In its inception 35 years ago the creator of python could not foresee how far python would go and how the environment would look like today. But nowadays there are a lot of security mechanisms they could leverage to adapt (from chroot by default to namespaces, cgroup, etc. on Linux, pledge, unveil on OpenBSD).

      The very idea that you offer a (python) package installer that is gonna pull a tree of code published and updated by random people in an unvetted manner open the door to all the supply chain attacks we are seeing.

      Around the same time (early 90s) Java was designed with high isolation in mind but the goal and vision was very different. And Java had its own problems.

      I'm saying that because at some point the security problem is gonna really hurt the python ecosystem.