Skip to content

mtshiba/pylyzer

Repository files navigation

pylyzer ⚑

pylyzer_logo_with_letters

vsm-version Build status Build status

pylyzer is a static code analyzer / language server for Python, written in Rust.

Installation

pip

pip install pylyzer

cargo (Rust package manager)

cargo install pylyzer --locked

build from source

git clone https://github.com/mtshiba/pylyzer.git
cargo install --path . --locked

Make sure that cargo/rustc is up-to-date, as pylyzer may be written with the latest (stable) language features.

How to use

Check a single file

pylyzer file.py

Check an entire package

If you don't specify a file path, pylyzer will automatically search for the entry point.

pylyzer

Start the language server

This option is used when an LSP-aware editor requires arguments to start pylyzer.

pylyzer --server

For other options, check the manual.

What is the advantage over pylint, pyright, pytype, etc.?

  • Performance 🌟

On average, pylyzer can inspect Python scripts more than 100 times faster than pytype and pyright 1. This is largely due to the fact that pylyzer is implemented in Rust.

performance

  • Reports readability πŸ“–

While pytype/pyright's error reports are illegible, pylyzer shows where the error occurred and provides clear error messages.

pyright

pyright_report

pylyzer πŸ˜ƒ

report

  • Rich LSP support πŸ“

pylyzer as a language server supports various features, such as completion and renaming (The language server is an adaptation of the Erg Language Server (ELS). For more information on the implemented features, please see here).

lsp_support

autoimport

VSCode extension

You can install the VSCode extension from the Marketplace or from the command line:

code --install-extension pylyzer.pylyzer

What is the difference from Ruff?

Ruff, like pylyzer, is a static code analysis tool for Python written in Rust, but Ruff is a linter and pylyzer is a type checker & language server. pylyzer does not perform linting & formatting, and Ruff does not perform type checking.

How it works

pylyzer uses the type checker of the Erg programming language internally. This language is a transpiled language that targets Python, and has a static type system.

pylyzer converts Python ASTs to Erg ASTs and passes them to Erg's type checker. It then displays the results with appropriate modifications.

Limitations

  • pylyzer's type inspector only assumes (potentially) statically typed code, so you cannot check any code uses reflections, such as exec, setattr, etc.

  • pylyzer (= Erg's type system) has its own type declarations for the Python standard APIs. Typing of all APIs is not complete and may result in an error that such an API does not exist.

  • Since pylyzer's type checking is conservative, you may encounter many (possibly false positive) errors. We are working on fixing this, but if you are concerned about editor errors, please turn off the diagnostics feature.

TODOs

  • type checking
    • variable
    • operator
    • function/method
    • class
    • async/await
  • type inference
    • variable
    • operator
    • function/method
    • class
  • builtin modules analysis
  • local scripts analysis
  • local packages analysis
  • LSP features
    • diagnostics
    • completion
    • rename
    • hover
    • goto definition
    • signature help
    • find references
    • document symbol
    • call hierarchy
  • collection types
    • list
    • dict
    • tuple
    • set
  • typing
    • Union
    • Optional
    • Literal
    • Callable
    • Any
    • TypeVar
    • TypedDict
    • ClassVar
    • Generic
    • Protocol
    • Final
    • Annotated
    • TypeAlias
    • TypeGuard
    • type parameter syntax
    • type narrowing
    • others
  • collections.abc
    • Iterable
    • Iterator
    • Mapping
    • Sequence
    • others
  • type assertion (typing.cast)
  • type narrowing (is, isinstance)
  • pyi (stub) files support
  • glob pattern file check
  • type comment (# type: ...)
  • virtual environment support
  • package manager support
    • pip
    • poetry
    • uv

Join us!

We are looking for contributors to help us improve pylyzer. If you are interested in contributing and have any questions, please feel free to contact us.


1 The performance test was conducted on MacBook (Early 2016) with 1.1 GHz Intel Core m3 processor and 8 GB 1867 MHz LPDDR3 memory.↩