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sphinx-autodoc-annotation

Use Python 3 annotations in sphinx-enabled docstrings

If you're on Python 3 and writing sphinx-enabled docstrings, you might feel like doing needless work when typing :type arg: or :rtype: directives. After all, why not use annotations for this?

Sure, :param str arg: description is not a lot of work, but when you want to document your argument as a specific class for which you have a :class: link, then you need to use :type: and it's cumbersome. By using this sphinx extension, you can turn this:

def f(a):
    """Do something.

    :param a: description for a
    :type a: :class:`ClassForA`
    :rtype: str
    """

into:

def f(a: ClassForA) -> str:
    """Do something.

    :param a: description for a
    """

Installation

First, you need Python 3.3+ and a Sphinx documentation (with autodoc enabled).

You can install sphinx-autodoc-annotation with:

$ pip install sphinx-autodoc-annotation

Then, you need to enable it in your conf.py file:

extensions = [
    'sphinx.ext.autodoc',
    'sphinx_autodoc_annotation',
]

You're done!

Usage

All you need to do to use this extension is to properly annotate your functions and methods with expected types for your arguments and return value. :type: and :rtype: directives will automatically be added to your docstring.

These directives behave like if you added them manually, that is, your argument is not going to show up only with :type arg: you need :param arg: to be there (with a description of what it does) for your type to show up.

When there are no annotations, argument types are deduced from default values. If your default value is a bool, str, int or float, the argument is going to be considered of that type. That feature is there mainly because f(flag: bool = False) feels a bit redundant.

In all cases, :type: and :rtype: directives in the docstring will always have precedence over annotations and defaults.