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▲Pyrefly - A faster Python type checker written in Rustpyrefly.org
142 points by muglug 59 days ago | 75 comments
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team_pyrefly 59 days ago [-]
Hi Hackernews, I’m on the team working on Pyrefly at Meta. We address a lot of the comments in our FAQ: https://pyrefly.org/en/docs/pyrefly-faq/. I will try to address some questions directly too!

Pyrefly is a work in progress, but you can install it from pypi and/or try our alpha VSCode extension if you are interested. You may still get false positive errors on your project as we are still burning down bugs and some features. We would love comments, bugs, or requests on our GitHub as you try it out.

Lastly, one of our team members is giving a talk at PyCon about the design if folks are interested: https://us.pycon.org/2025/schedule/presentation/118/. We didn’t expect much attention before then, so thanks for taking a look!

emptysea 59 days ago [-]
A rewrite of https://github.com/facebook/pyre-check in rust?
team_pyrefly 59 days ago [-]
Yes, this is a ground up rewrite: https://pyrefly.org/en/docs/pyrefly-faq/#what-is-the-relatio...
codethief 59 days ago [-]
My thought exactly! Maybe for performance reasons? (Though I wouldn't expect OCaml to perform that badly, either…)
nine_k 59 days ago [-]
On one hand, "launching Spring 2025". On the other hand, 47% complete, with a ton of basic stuff not yet ready. I wonder how fast they plan to move, given that only 32 days remain of the spring.
rplnt 59 days ago [-]
Not in southern hemisphere.
croemer 59 days ago [-]
It's not "47% complete", it's just that (now) 52% of the issues in a milestone are complete.
Vinz_ 59 days ago [-]
We’re 53 days away from summer though.
alexmolas 59 days ago [-]
The astral team (behind uv and ruff) is already working on a type checker in Rust, and given the quality of their existing tools, I'm inclined to wait and see what they release. Pyrefly looks interesting, but from the repo it seems pretty early-stage and not intended for external use yet.
nemith 59 days ago [-]
Also Facebook has a history of releasing the source code for something. Making a huge splash and then essentially doing nothing after 3 months (aka after someone gets their review).

They use the code internally but fail at making sure it has use externally. This is doubly the case for anything infrastructure

Buck2: Was released. Never could be built correctly without the latest nightly of Rust and even then it was fragile outside of Meta's build architecture

Sapling: Has a whole bunch of excitement and backing when it was announced. Has been essentially dead 3 mos after release.

I used to work for Meta infra. I know the MO. Have a hard time trusting.

Astral use-case is external and has a better chance of actually being supported.

team_pyrefly 59 days ago [-]
We totally get why you might be skeptical and even address this in our FAQ: https://pyrefly.org/en/docs/pyrefly-faq/#how-do-i-know-this-...

We know we can't just ask for trust upfront. Instead, we want to earn it by showing up consistently and following through on our commitments. So, take us for a spin and see how we do over time. We're excited to prove ourselves!

59 days ago [-]
59 days ago [-]
ipsum2 59 days ago [-]
Sapling is actively developed, not "dead after 3 months": https://github.com/facebook/sapling/commits/main/

Have not tried building Buck2 (no personal use for it), but its also actively developed: https://github.com/facebook/buck2/commits/main/

nemith 59 days ago [-]
Sorry I didn't mean it's not dead but it really hasn't got as much feature support. Things like LFS support got deproritized just because the internal team asking for it got a different feature.

Both are EXTREMELY active but only for the needs of Meta and not for the community.

Adoption outside of Meta is nearly non-existent because of this.

Look at something like Jujitsu. instead of Sapling and you can see a lot more community support, a lot more focus on features that are needed for everyone (still no LFS support, but it wasn't because Google didn't need it).

I guess I don't consider a larger number of commits as actively supporting the community. The community use is second place and the open source is just a one time boost to recruiting PR.

wocram 59 days ago [-]
Is this standard promotion driven development? Or do the people who are trying to open source these products end up being blocked?
nemith 59 days ago [-]
When I was there (which was a while ago) almost every decision was based around PSC (Performance Summary Cycle) and it's easy to justify a good rating for a large project being open sourced. Less so to make sure it's well supported for the use cases of the community.
maxloh 59 days ago [-]
It is codenamed "Red Knot".

Refer to the crates starting with red_knot in this directory to follow its development: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/tree/main/crates

The latest commit was only an hour ago.

lame-lexem 59 days ago [-]
astral team has live web demo they use internally of redknot on https://playknot.ruff.rs
jihadjihad 59 days ago [-]
At first I thought this was the release from Astral for their type checker. Same boat, sitting tight, holding champagne ready for that day too.
WD-42 59 days ago [-]
Cannot wait to get rid of pyright, but I’ll be holding out for Astrals type checker.
nikisweeting 59 days ago [-]
I've loved pyright so far, what do you dislike about it?
JimDabell 59 days ago [-]
It has warnings that steer you away from idiomatic Python towards less idiomatic Python.

Idiomatic Python favours EAFP (Easier to Ask Forgiveness than Permission) over LBYL (Look Before You Leap), so you might write something like this when using TypedDicts:

    try:
        foo = bar["baz"]["qux"]
        ...
    except KeyError:
        ...
Pyright warns you about this and pushes you to write this:

    if "baz" in bar and "qux" in bar["baz"]:
        foo = bar["baz"]["qux"]
        ...
    else:
        ...
They identified this as a bug and fixed it, then changed course and decided to reinstate the behaviour. So if you want to write idiomatic Python, you need to disable typechecking TypedDicts.

— https://github.com/microsoft/pyright/issues/1739

Now if this were a linter then I would understand. But a type checker should not be opinionated to the point of pushing people not to use idiomatic Python.

NeutralForest 59 days ago [-]
For maximum safety, I would write:

    if bar.get("baz", {}).get("qux") is not None:
    ...
nikisweeting 59 days ago [-]
any more than 2 levels deep of this pattern and I reach for python-benedict
NeutralForest 58 days ago [-]
Nice, I didn't know about that lib! Usually if I have very nested content I recursively parse it and I'll have some business logic in the function to handle cases here and there. Or I'll have a validation library like Pydantic.
copperroof 59 days ago [-]
When I last compared it to mypy a few months ago adding typechecking to an old project that had types but I had for some reason never actually run a typechecker on it:

* Was overwhelmingly slower than mypy

* Had a few hundred more false positives. I gather from reading their philosophy afterward that this was on purpose. Rigid dogma > doing the right thing in the circumstance in their opinion.

* Did not find any actual bugs, whereas mypy identified 3 errors that lead to fixing real issues AND had fewer false positives, due to its better understanding of python code.

* Comically overweight with its typescript dependency.

My first impression of it was of a very low quality, over engineered project prioritizing noise over signal. Looking forward to trying out the astral typechecker as well.

ndr 59 days ago [-]
It's slow as hell. And every version bump comes with a bunch of new warnings/errors by default that is quite disruptive if you want to keep it quiet. But mostly that it is annoyingly slow.
emptysea 59 days ago [-]
Might be worth checking out https://github.com/DetachHead/basedpyright

But I’ve had the same issue with too many warnings, mypy is better at understanding Python but even slower.

addoo 59 days ago [-]
I guess it’s all relative. One of my code bases still has pylint running with only a couple custom lint rules, that one is slow as hell.

As for version bumping, maybe it’s just a me thing, but I hard fix a version and only update occasionally. Sure each update brings new warnings, but most of them are valid and if you only do it a couple times a year… not that big a deal.

WD-42 59 days ago [-]
Try ruff instead of pylint. It will open your eyes to how performant software can actually be. All of us that have been working in python and JavaScript for too long have really forgotten.
addoo 59 days ago [-]
We use ruff for everything that isn’t a custom rule.

The only thing I found it ‘missing’ was an indentation check (it’s in preview, I don’t turn on preview rules), but I realized it doesn’t matter because we also have a formatter running on everything.

WD-42 59 days ago [-]
It’s dog slow. I realize we are talking about a python checker written in typescript, so two relatively slow languages combined, but still.

The dependency on node makes it a PITA to set up in non-vs code environments as well.

insane_dreamer 59 days ago [-]
pyright doesn't do well with inspecting inherited types, at least in our experience. Falls far behind JetBrain's type checker in Pycharm. (This is one reason why pycharm >> zed.)
olejorgenb 59 days ago [-]
Are you kidding? Pycharm's pychecker is very incomplete. My whole team moved away from pychram due to the shitty typehint support which barely moved forward. (5+ year old bug, inconsistent behavior across the different features in pycharm indicating to me a fragile mess of heuristics behind the curtains)

I agree that most of the functionality on top of the type checker/engine is better in pycharm though. But a correct implementation is more important

femtozer 59 days ago [-]
The team behind ruff/uv is working on a similar tool:

https://x.com/charliermarsh/status/1884651482009477368

joshdavham 59 days ago [-]
Have there been any updates on when they think it’ll be released?
singhrac 59 days ago [-]
At least the alpha milestone is May 12, but I don't think they've publically committed to anything.

In particular for me it would be great to have a better typechecker than Pyright available for Zed (basically why the editor is a nonstarter right now).

Y_Y 59 days ago [-]
An editor is a nonstarter because it doesn't doesn't integrate the right implementation of some particular optional feature for some particular language?

That's a high bar!

drcongo 59 days ago [-]
I have some sympathies with the parent post as Zed is my daily driver and I mostly write Python. Pyright is horrible to work with, tons of false positives. Parent poster - you might find this useful: https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/discussions/24801
hopfenspergerj 59 days ago [-]
No it is not horrible to work with. Even the “standard” settings are quite lax.
drcongo 58 days ago [-]
I think our respective comment votes disagree.
singhrac 59 days ago [-]
Well, I mean why use a suboptimal tool? I don’t have any ideology to follow, my codebase is just mostly Python and heavily typed. Pyright doesn’t support all the features so I stick with VSCode/Pylance.
WD-42 59 days ago [-]
So what editor is a starter then? As far as I know pyright is the de facto checker for python in most editors. Not sure why it would be worse in zed, seems to work fine for me. Or as well as pyright can work.
odie5533 59 days ago [-]
This is awesome! Thank you for sharing it!

I'm wondering though, why do existing tools like Mypy and Pyright not scale for Meta? Is Pyre(fly) being used extensively at Meta? In general what sort of issues did Meta run into?

team_pyrefly 58 days ago [-]
We go into it a bit more here: https://pyrefly.org/en/docs/pyrefly-faq/ The short answer is that the scale of the Python projects we work on is huge. Pyre is the only checker that can scale for our needs today. To bring modern features like type inference and better IDE integration, a full rewrite needed to happen. We are not done just yet, but have been using our massive codebases to test the performance and flexibility of the checker. Thanks for the question!
59 days ago [-]
koakuma-chan 59 days ago [-]
> pyrefly check --suppress-errors

> INFO 5,240 errors shown, 65,932 errors ignored

Not a single Python type checker had ever worked for me so far.

kstrauser 59 days ago [-]
I don't see the link between that output and your conclusion. Are those results wrong?
koakuma-chan 59 days ago [-]
> Are those results wrong?

I don't know. Some packages just don't work with type checkers, e.g. Django.

masklinn 59 days ago [-]
Django has a community stubs project, are you using it?
aitchnyu 58 days ago [-]
Does django-stubs work with other type checkers than Pyright?
masklinn 54 days ago [-]
Stubs are a standard python feature (PEP 561) so I'd expect them to work with any type checker which supports stubs, which should be all of them (as much of the ecosystem is typed via stubs).
etimberg 59 days ago [-]
the stubs can only do so much. There's so much magic and inferred properties that a type checker will never be able to fill in alone
johnisgood 59 days ago [-]
Is it not that he used the "--suppress-errors" flag yet it did not ignore the errors?
kstrauser 59 days ago [-]
It's hard to tell. Other similar options in other commands can mean things like "exit with status 0 even if errors are detected". Without installing pyrefly, I'm not sure what that flag's supposed to do. It's not documented on their site.
koakuma-chan 59 days ago [-]
It adds a comment to suppress the error above each line in your codebase that causes an error, but it reports the errors before doing that, so you can only see the result after you re-run `pyrefly check`.
kstrauser 59 days ago [-]
Oh! That's nifty. It leaves you with a baseline so you can stop making new mistakes, and gives you something to grep for when you want to fix existing ones.
team_pyrefly 59 days ago [-]
Thanks for giving this a try! We go over how to use the upgrade tooling (`--suppress-errors`) in the guide here: https://pyrefly.org/en/docs/installation/. This is intended to make upgrading from different versions of type checkers easier. It’s something we use internally and wanted to share with the community along with the checker itself.

We also allow you the ability to suppress whole classes of errors if you want to ignore specific error types and avoid inline ignores: https://pyrefly.org/en/docs/configuration/ A word of caution: this will ignore future errors of this type as well.

First, make sure your project is properly configured and then follow the instructions. `--suppress-errors` will add ignores inline allowing the project to check cleanly. We have thought about a feature that allows you to keep suppressions in a separate file, but we have not put it on the roadmap yet. If this is something important for your workflow, we would like to learn more - please add a feature request on GitHub.

ipsum2 59 days ago [-]
It's literally working? What did you expect?
koakuma-chan 59 days ago [-]
Maybe it's working but it's not useful.
masklinn 59 days ago [-]
What would you expect "useful" to be if your codebase is basically incompatible with type checking?
koakuma-chan 59 days ago [-]
I expected that I would be able to run the check command and it would just work. Upon reading the docs, this tool recommends incremental adoption, and after using `--suppress-errors`, `# pyrefly: ignore` is all over my codebase.
krick 59 days ago [-]
I know I shouldn't get into this thread, but I'm extremely curious: what did you expect should have happened? I mean, literally, what do you mean by "just work", what work did you expect a type checker to perform if not to show you errors?
koakuma-chan 59 days ago [-]
I expected a reasonable amount of reasonable errors, not 60k+ errors most of which are import-error, even though the code runs fine.

edit: most errors weren't actually import-error, I just misunderstood --search-path

fastasucan 59 days ago [-]
Its the fault of the tool that the codebase had lots of errors?
koakuma-chan 59 days ago [-]
I would say it's the fault of the ecosystem. Hopefully it will get better as libraries adopt type hints.
nerdponx 59 days ago [-]
That's incremental adoption for adding type hints, not for adopting this particular tool in an already-type-hinted codebase.
Yossarrian22 59 days ago [-]
…how else would it work?
fastasucan 59 days ago [-]
What does "just work" mean? You are comically obtuse.
ForHackernews 59 days ago [-]
Fix your types.
darthrupert 58 days ago [-]
Don't blame the tool for your shoddy work. Either accept your mediocre quality or do something to fix it.
IshKebab 59 days ago [-]
Do you... have type annotations? I think you might be missing the point.
jon-wood 59 days ago [-]
I think the point here is that for something like Python the default behaviour should be an assumed return type of `Any` rather than throwing an error. Maybe that is the case and the GP had configured it otherwise.
IshKebab 59 days ago [-]
No it shouldn't because then you can easily miss places where you should have added a type annotation, and also your lazy colleagues won't bother adding them at all.
darthrupert 58 days ago [-]
The worst of both worlds is colleagues who insert type annotations but they're wrong. And there's no CI pipe to verify the types before check-in.

Working with these things makes me often think that people who want to write high quality software should just use a better language. But, well, real world is real.

koakuma-chan 58 days ago [-]
> just use a better language

This

IshKebab 57 days ago [-]
Yeah unfortunately Python is crazy popular so a lot of the time you don't get a choice.

If fairness if you set up uv and Ruff and Pyright it's kind of ok. Still have to deal with the general noobness of the ecosystem and the horrific performance, but I've seen worse.