T
's type must be consistent across multiple uses within a given scope, while U
's does not.
With a Union
type used as function parameters, the arguments as well as the return type can all be different:
U = Union[int, str]
def union_f(arg1: U, arg2: U) -> U:
return arg1
x = union_f(1, "b") # No error due to different types
x = union_f(1, 2) # Also no error
x = union_f("a", 2) # Also no error
x # And it can't tell in any of the cases if 'x' is an int or string
Compare that to a similar case with a TypeVar
where the argument types must match:
T = TypeVar("T", int, str)
def typevar_f(arg1: T, arg2: T) -> T:
return arg1
y = typevar_f(1, "b") # "Expected type 'int' (matched generic type 'T'), got 'str' instead
y = typevar_f("a", 2) # "Expected type 'str' (matched generic type 'T'), got 'int' instead
y = typevar_f("a", "b") # No error
y # It knows that 'y' is a string
y = typevar_f(1, 2) # No error
y # It knows that 'y' is an int
So, use a TypeVar
if multiple types are allowed, but different usages of T
within a single scope must match each other. Use a Union
if multiple types are allowed, but different usages of U
within a given scope don't need to match each other.
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