Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Bump attrs from 19.1.0 to 21.2.0 #81

Open
wants to merge 1 commit into
base: master
Choose a base branch
from

Conversation

dependabot-preview[bot]
Copy link

Bumps attrs from 19.1.0 to 21.2.0.

Release notes

Sourced from attrs's releases.

21.2.0

Yesterday's 21.1.0 has unfortunately two regressions that we're fixing with today's 21.2.0 release:

  • The new recursive mode for attr.evolve() broke some use cases.
  • attrs is not importable under Python 3.4 anymore. While 3.4 hasn't been supported for a while now, we don't want it throw errors after installation.

We've reverted the changes to attr.evolve() and added packaging metadata blocking Python 3.4.

Additionally, we are yanking 21.1.0 from PyPI. If you've pinned attrs to 21.1.0, this does not affect you in any way.

21.1.0

I am extremely excited to announce the release of attrs 21.1.0.

attrs is the direct ancestor of – and the inspiration for – dataclasses in the standard library and remains the more powerful option for creating regular classes without getting bogged down with writing identical boilerplate again and again: https://www.attrs.org/

Heartfelt thanks go to my generous GitHub sponsors, companies subscribing to attrs on Tidelift, and people who bought me a coffee on Ko-fi! Support like that makes me work on FOSS on a Saturday afternoon – especially when a release drags itself like this one! <3

While this release took a bit longer than I wished for, it comes with many exciting changes. The highlights alone are longer than a usual changelog:

  • The next-generation APIs (@attr.define, @attr.mutable, @attr.frozen, @attr.field) are deemed stable now. The old ones aren't going anywhere, but I encourage you to check the new ones out – they're much nicer!

  • pyright and pylance support: Eric Traut of Microsoft was kind enough to involve me in their work on the dataclass_transforms spec.

    As a result, Microsoft's type checker pyright will work with this attrs release, and so will their Python language server pylance which should be exciting to VS Code users.

    Currently it only supports a subset of attrs's features, but it's the most important ones and more will most likely follow. Some of the limitations are documented in our documentation on type annotations.

  • Customization of field comparison. This is something especially NumPy users have been asking for for a long time: you can now fully customize how a field is compared. We also ship a helper to avoid boilerplate code. So if you'd like to have an object with a NumPy array that compares correctly, this is the way:

    import attr
    import numpy
    @​attr.define
    class C:
    an_array = attr.field(eq=attr.cmp_using(eq=numpy.array_equal))

    Check out the new documentation on comparison for details.

  • To make it more ergonomic, I've decided to un-deprecate the cmp argument again, so you can customize eq and order in one go. Sorry about the trouble! The cmp attribute remains deprecated.

  • New powerful __init__ helpers:

    1. If attrs deduces you don't want it to write a __init__ for you, it will create an __attrs_init__ instead that you can call from your custom __init__.
    2. If attrs finds a __attrs_pre_init__, it will call it without any arguments before doing any initializations. This is really only useful if you want to run super().__init__(), but that's a use-case people have asked for for years!

    See Hooking Yourself Into Initialization for details.

  • In preparation for the (rescinded) plan to make from __future__ import annotations the default in Python 3.10, attr.resolve_types() can now also be used to resolve types inside of field_transformers.

A Look Ahead

For the next release we've got even bigger plans! By stabilizing the next-generation APIs we can finally go the last step, I've been talking for years (yeah, sorry): import attrs.

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from attrs's changelog.

21.2.0 (2021-05-07)

Backward-incompatible Changes

  • We had to revert the recursive feature for attr.evolve() because it broke some use-cases -- sorry! #806
  • Python 3.4 is now blocked using packaging metadata because attrs can't be imported on it anymore. To ensure that 3.4 users can keep installing attrs easily, we will yank 21.1.0 from PyPI. This has no consequences if you pin attrs to 21.1.0. #807

21.1.0 (2021-05-06)

Deprecations

  • The long-awaited, much-talked-about, little-delivered import attrs is finally upon us!

    Since the NG APIs have now been proclaimed stable, the next release of attrs will allow you to actually import attrs. We're taking this opportunity to replace some defaults in our APIs that made sense in 2015, but don't in 2021.

    So please, if you have any pet peeves about defaults in attrs's APIs, now is the time to air your grievances in #487! We're not gonna get such a chance for a second time, without breaking our backward-compatibility guarantees, or long deprecation cycles. Therefore, speak now or forever hold you peace! #487

  • The cmp argument to attr.s() and attr.ib() has been undeprecated It will continue to be supported as syntactic sugar to set eq and order in one go.

    I'm terribly sorry for the hassle around this argument! The reason we're bringing it back is it's usefulness regarding customization of equality/ordering.

    The cmp attribute and argument on attr.Attribute remains deprecated and will be removed later this year. #773

Changes

  • It's now possible to customize the behavior of eq and order by passing in a callable. #435, #627

  • The instant favorite next-generation APIs are not provisional anymore!

    They are also officially supported by Mypy as of their 0.800 release.

    We hope the next release will already contain an (additional) importable package called attrs. #668, #786

  • If an attribute defines a converter, the type of its parameter is used as type annotation for its corresponding __init__ parameter.

    If an attr.converters.pipe is used, the first one's is used. #710

  • Fixed the creation of an extra slot for an attr.ib when the parent class already has a slot with the same name. #718

  • __attrs__init__() will now be injected if init=False, or if auto_detect=True and a user-defined __init__() exists.

    This enables users to do "pre-init" work in their __init__() (such as super().__init__()).

    __init__() can then delegate constructor argument processing to self.__attrs_init__(*args, **kwargs). #731

  • bool(attr.NOTHING) is now False. #732

  • It's now possible to use super() inside of properties of slotted classes. #747

  • Allow for a __attrs_pre_init__() method that -- if defined -- will get called at the beginning of the attrs-generated __init__() method. #750

  • Added forgotten attr.Attribute.evolve() to type stubs. #752

... (truncated)

Commits

Dependabot compatibility score

Dependabot will resolve any conflicts with this PR as long as you don't alter it yourself. You can also trigger a rebase manually by commenting @dependabot rebase.


Dependabot commands and options

You can trigger Dependabot actions by commenting on this PR:

  • @dependabot rebase will rebase this PR
  • @dependabot recreate will recreate this PR, overwriting any edits that have been made to it
  • @dependabot merge will merge this PR after your CI passes on it
  • @dependabot squash and merge will squash and merge this PR after your CI passes on it
  • @dependabot cancel merge will cancel a previously requested merge and block automerging
  • @dependabot reopen will reopen this PR if it is closed
  • @dependabot close will close this PR and stop Dependabot recreating it. You can achieve the same result by closing it manually
  • @dependabot ignore this major version will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this major version (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself)
  • @dependabot ignore this minor version will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this minor version (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself)
  • @dependabot ignore this dependency will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this dependency (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself)
  • @dependabot use these labels will set the current labels as the default for future PRs for this repo and language
  • @dependabot use these reviewers will set the current reviewers as the default for future PRs for this repo and language
  • @dependabot use these assignees will set the current assignees as the default for future PRs for this repo and language
  • @dependabot use this milestone will set the current milestone as the default for future PRs for this repo and language
  • @dependabot badge me will comment on this PR with code to add a "Dependabot enabled" badge to your readme

Additionally, you can set the following in your Dependabot dashboard:

  • Update frequency (including time of day and day of week)
  • Pull request limits (per update run and/or open at any time)
  • Automerge options (never/patch/minor, and dev/runtime dependencies)
  • Out-of-range updates (receive only lockfile updates, if desired)
  • Security updates (receive only security updates, if desired)

@dependabot-preview dependabot-preview bot added the dependencies Pull requests that update a dependency file label May 10, 2021
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
dependencies Pull requests that update a dependency file
Projects
None yet
Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

0 participants