359
votes

I have a function in python that can either return a bool or a list. Is there a way to specify the return types using type hints.

For example, Is this the correct way to do it?

def foo(id) -> list or bool:
      ...
4
how do you end up with either a list or a boolean?Padraic Cunningham
@PadraicCunningham Perhaps the implementation is I'll send you my Id, you send me either a list or a boolean :DBhargav Rao♦
@PadraicCunningham Polymorphism. If your function performs a check on the input, whatever it is, you want to get a boolean when you feed one variable or get a list of booleans when you feed a list of variables.Guimoute

4 Answers

515
votes

From the documentation

class typing.Union

Union type; Union[X, Y] means either X or Y.

Hence the proper way to represent more than one return data type is

from typing import Union


def foo(client_id: str) -> Union[list,bool]

But do note that typing is not enforced. Python continues to remain a dynamically-typed language. The annotation syntax has been developed to help during the development of the code prior to being released into production. As PEP 484 states, "no type checking happens at runtime."

>>> def foo(a:str) -> list:
...     return("Works")
... 
>>> foo(1)
'Works'

As you can see I am passing a int value and returning a str. However the __annotations__ will be set to the respective values.

>>> foo.__annotations__ 
{'return': <class 'list'>, 'a': <class 'str'>}

Please Go through PEP 483 for more about Type hints. Also see What are Type hints in Python 3.5?

Kindly note that this is available only for Python 3.5 and upwards. This is mentioned clearly in PEP 484.

64
votes

In case anyone landed here in search of "how to specify types of multiple return values?", use Tuple[type_value1, ..., type_valueN]

from typing import Tuple

def f() -> Tuple[dict, str]:
    a = {1: 2}
    b = "hello"
    return a, b

More info: How to annotate types of multiple return values?

43
votes

The statement def foo(client_id: str) -> list or bool: when evaluated is equivalent to def foo(client_id: str) -> list: and will therefore not do what you want.

The native way to describe a "either A or B" type hint is Union (thanks to Bhargav Rao):

def foo(client_id: str) -> Union[list, bool]:

Or, starting with Python 3.10 and beyond, using the | operator:

def foo(client_id: str) -> list | bool:

I do not want to be the "Why do you want to do this anyway" guy, but maybe having 2 return types isn't what you want:

If you want to return a bool to indicate some type of special error-case, consider using Exceptions instead. If you want to return a bool as some special value, maybe an empty list would be a good representation. You can also indicate that None could be returned with Optional[list]

23
votes

Python 3.10 (use |): Example for a function which takes a single argument that is either an int or str and returns either an int or str:

def func(arg: int | str) -> int | str:
              ^^^^^^^^^     ^^^^^^^^^ 
             type of arg   return type

Python 3.5 - 3.9 (use typing.Union):

from typing import Union
def func(arg: Union[int, str]) -> Union[int, str]:
              ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 
                type of arg         return type

For the special case of X | None you can use Optional[X].