Here are some thoughts––maybe even a proposal––for type-related terminology, because clear terminology makes discussion and reasoning easier, and helps avoid errors.
(And related to the PEP 560 thread, the question of what should go into class attributes like __bases__). Terminology regarding types is confusing enough, and of all the terminology I've seen, I like these most: * concrete type: something that concretely implements data storage or functionality. Usually this is a normal class. * abstract type: an assumption or set of assumptions made about an instance. While both kinds can (and probably should) have a corresponding runtime representation, there's not that much that we can currently assume about the second kind––abstract types. They could be almost anything. Anyway, regarding PEP 560, in my speculated naming, the __bases__ attribute of a class would contain both concrete and abstract bases. Those with any concrete method implementations should go in the mro. But then there's the problem that "abstract base classes" may contain both concrete and abstract methods. What do we call such a "type"? Maybe we have both "concrete" and "strictly concrete" types. Perhaps we also have both "abstract" and "strictly abstract" types. An ABC with some concrete default implementations might then be both a concrete type and an abstract type. Note that in the above bullet point "definition" of concrete type, I intentionally left out the requirement that the type can be instantiated. The other two bullet points are: * strictly concrete type: a concrete type that is not abstract––it concretely implements everything that it represents / describes. This is almost always a normal class, so it might be also known as "class". * strictly abstract type: an abstract type that is not concrete––it does not implement any functionality or storage. There might be a way to improve terminology from this, but I feel that what I sketched here is usable but still not very ambiguous. ––Koos -- + Koos Zevenhoven + http://twitter.com/k7hoven +
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