You are probably looking for Callback protocols.
In short, when you want to express a callable with a complex signature, what you'll want to do is to create a custom Protocol that defines a __call__
method with the precise signature you want.
For example, in your case:
from typing import Protocol
# Or, if you want to support Python 3.7 and below, install the typing_extensions
# module via pip and do the below:
from typing_extensions import Protocol
class MyCallable(Protocol):
def __call__(self, a: int, b: float) -> float: ...
def good(a: int, b: float) -> float: ...
def bad(x: int, y: float) -> float: ...
def function_executor(a: int, b: float, fn: MyCallable) -> float:
return fn(a=a, b=b)
function_executor(1, 2.3, good) # Ok!
function_executor(1, 2.3, bad) # Errors
If you try type-checking this program using mypy, you'll get the following (admittedly cryptic) error on the last line:
Argument 3 to "function_executor" has incompatible type "Callable[[int, float], float]"; expected "MyCallable"
(Callback protocols are somewhat new, so hopefully the quality of the error messages will improve over time.)
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