With high-performance #Python type checkers like #Pyright, #Pyrefly, and #ty now available, what's the value proposition of #Mypy? Is it the reference implementation? Or does Mypy still have the most features? I'm not trying to knock Mypy, I'm genuinely asking because I don't know.
With high-performance #Python type checkers like #Pyright, #Pyrefly, and #ty now available, what's the value proposition of #Mypy? Is it the reference implementation? Or does Mypy still have the most features? I'm not trying to knock Mypy, I'm genuinely asking because I don't know.
With high-performance #Python type checkers like #Pyright, #Pyrefly, and #ty now available, what's the value proposition of #Mypy? Is it the reference implementation? Or does Mypy still have the most features? I'm not trying to knock Mypy, I'm genuinely asking because I don't know.
With high-performance #Python type checkers like #Pyright, #Pyrefly, and #ty now available, what's the value proposition of #Mypy? Is it the reference implementation? Or does Mypy still have the most features? I'm not trying to knock Mypy, I'm genuinely asking because I don't know.