Interfaces
Broadly speaking, an interface is an intermediary that takes part in the interaction between two entities. For instance, the interface of a car consists mainly of the steering wheel, pedals, gear stick, dashboard, knobs, and so on. The interface of a computer traditionally consists of a mouse, keyboard, and display.
In programming, interface may mean two things:
- The overall shape of the interaction plane that code can have
- The abstract definition of possible interactions with the code that is intentionally separated from its implementation
In the spirit of the first meaning, the interface is a specific combination of symbols used to interact with the unit of code. The interface of a function, for instance, will be the name of that function, its input arguments, and the output it returns. The interface of an object will be all of its methods that can be invoked and all the attributes that can be accessed.
Collections of units of code (functions, objects, classes) are often grouped into libraries. In Python, libraries take the form of modules and packages (collections of modules). They also have interfaces. Contents of modules and packages usually can be used in various combinations and you don't have to interact with all of their contents. That makes them programmable applications, and that's why interfaces of libraries are often referred to as Application Programming Interfaces (APIs).
This meaning of interface can be expanded to other elements of the computing world. Operating systems have interfaces in the form of filesystems and system calls. Web and remote services have interfaces in the form of communication protocols.
The second meaning of interface can be understood as the formalization of the former. Here interface is understood as a contract that a specific element of the code declares to fulfill. Such a formal interface can be extracted from the implementation and can live as a standalone entity. This gives the possibility to build applications that depend on a specific interface but don't care about the actual implementation, as long as it exists and fulfills the contract.
This formal meaning of interface can also be expanded to larger programming concepts:
- Libraries: The C programming language defines the API of its standard library, also known as the ISO C Library. Unlike Python, the C standard library has numerous implementations. For Linux, the most common is probably the GNU C Library (glibc), but it has alternatives like dietlibc or musl. Other operating systems come with their own ISO C Library implementations.
- Operating System: The Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) is a collection of standards that define a common interface for operating systems. There are many systems that are certified to be compliant with that standard (macOS and Solaris to name a couple). There are also operating systems that are mostly compliant (Linux, Android, OpenBSD, and many more). Instead of using the term "POSIX compliance," we can say that those systems implement the POSIX interface.
- Web services: OpenID Connect (OIDC) is an open standard for authentication and an authorization framework based on the OAuth 2.0 protocol. Services that want to implement the OIDC standard must provide specific well-defined interfaces described in this standard.
Formal interfaces are an extremely important concept in object-oriented programming languages. In this context, the interface abstracts either the form or purpose of the modeled object. It usually describes a collection of methods and attributes that a class should have to implement with the desired behavior.
In a purist approach, the definition of interface does not provide any usable implementation of methods. It just defines an explicit contract for any class that wishes to implement the interface. Interfaces are often composable. This means that a single class can implement multiple interfaces at once. In this way, interfaces are the key building block of design patterns. A single design pattern can be understood as a composition of specific interfaces. Similar to interfaces, design patterns do not have an inherent implementation. They are just reusable scaffolding for developers to solve common problems.
Python developers prefer duck typing over explicit interface definitions but having well-defined interaction contracts between classes can often improve the overall quality of the software and reduce the area of potential errors. For instance, creators of a new interface implementation get a clear list of methods and attributes that a given class needs to expose. With proper implementation, it is impossible to forget about a method that is required by a given interface.
Support for an abstract interface is the cornerstone of many statically typed languages. Java, for instance, has traits that are explicit declarations that a class implements a specific interface. This allows Java programmers to achieve polymorphism without type inheritance, which sometimes can become problematic. Go, on the other hand, doesn't have classes and doesn't offer type inheritance, but interfaces in Go allow for selected object-oriented patterns and polymorphism without type inheritance. For both those languages, interfaces are like an explicit version of duck typing behavior—Java and Go use interfaces to verify type safety at compile time, rather than using duck typing to tie things together at runtime.
Python has a completely different typing philosophy than these languages, so it does not have native support for interfaces verified at compile time. Anyway, if you would like to have more explicit control of application interfaces, there is a handful of solutions to choose from:
- Using a third-party framework like zope.interface that adds a notion of interfaces
- Using Abstract Base Classes (ABCs)
- Leveraging typing annotation,
typing.Protocol
, and static type analyzers.
We will carefully review each of those solutions in the following sections.
A bit of history: zope.interface
There are a few frameworks that allow you to build explicit interfaces in Python. The most notable one is a part of the Zope project. It is the zope.interface
package. Although, nowadays, Zope is not as popular as it used to be a decade ago, the zope.interface
package is still one of the main components of the still popular Twisted framework. zope.interface
is also one of the oldest and still active interface frameworks commonly used in Python. It predates mainstream Python features like ABCs, so we will start from it and later see how it compares to other interface solutions.
The zope.interface
package was created by Jim Fulton to mimic the features of Java interfaces at the time of its inception.
The interface concept works best for areas where a single abstraction can have multiple implementations or can be applied to different objects that probably shouldn't be tangled with inheritance structure. To better present this idea, we will take the example of a problem that can deal with different entities that share some common traits but aren't exactly the same thing.
We will try to build a simple collider system that can detect collisions between multiple overlapping objects. This is something that could be used in a simple game or simulation. Our solution will be rather trivial and inefficient. Remember that the goal here is to explore the concept of interfaces and not to build a bulletproof collision engine for a blockbuster game.
The algorithm we will use is called Axis-Aligned Bounding Box (AABB). It is a simple way to detect a collision between two axis-aligned (no rotation) rectangles. It assumes that all elements that will be tested can be constrained with a rectangular bounding box. The algorithm is fairly simple and needs to compare only four rectangle coordinates:
Figure 5.1: Rectangle coordinate comparisons in the AABB algorithm
We will start with a simple function that checks whether two rectangles overlap:
def rects_collide(rect1, rect2):
"""Check collision between rectangles
Rectangle coordinates:
┌─────(x2, y2)
│ │
(x1, y1) ────┘
"""
return (
rect1.x1 < rect2.x2 and
rect1.x2 > rect2.x1 and
rect1.y1 < rect2.y2 and
rect1.y2 > rect2.y1
)
We haven't defined any typing annotations but from the above code, it should be clearly visible that we expect both arguments of the rects_collide()
function to have four attributes: x1, y1, x2, y2
. These correspond to the coordinates of the lower-left and upper-right corners of the bounding box.
Having the rects_collide()
function, we can define another function that will detect all collisions within a batch of objects. It can be as simple as follows:
import itertools
def find_collisions(objects):
return [
(item1, item2)
for item1, item2
in itertools.combinations(objects, 2)
if rects_collide(
item1.bounding_box,
item2.bounding_box
)
]
What is left is to define some classes of objects that can be tested together against collisions. We will model a few different shapes: a square, a rectangle, and a circle. Each shape is different so will have a different internal structure. There is no sensible class that we could make a common ancestor. To keep things simple, we will use dataclasses and properties. The following are all initial definitions:
from dataclasses import dataclass
@dataclass
class Square:
x: float
y: float
size: float
@property
def bounding_box(self):
return Box(
self.x,
self.y,
self.x + self.size,
self.y + self.size
)
@dataclass
class Rect:
x: float
y: float
width: float
height: float
@property
def bounding_box(self):
return Box(
self.x,
self.y,
self.x + self.width,
self.y + self.height
)
@dataclass
class Circle:
x: float
y: float
radius: float
@property
def bounding_box(self):
return Box(
self.x - self.radius,
self.y - self.radius,
self.x + self.radius,
self.y + self.radius
)
The only common thing about those classes (apart from being dataclasses) is the bounding_box
property that returns the Box
class instance. The Box
class is also a dataclass:
@dataclass
class Box:
x1: float
y1: float
x2: float
y2: float
Definitions of dataclasses are quite simple and don't require explanation. We can test if our system works by passing a bunch of instances to the find_collisions()
function as in the following example:
for collision in find_collisions([
Square(0, 0, 10),
Rect(5, 5, 20, 20),
Square(15, 20, 5),
Circle(1, 1, 2),
]):
print(collision)
If we did everything right, the above code should yield the following output with three collisions:
(Square(x=0, y=0, size=10), Rect(x=5, y=5, width=20, height=20))
(Square(x=0, y=0, size=10), Circle(x=1, y=1, radius=2))
(Rect(x=5, y=5, width=20, height=20), Square(x=15, y=20, size=5))
Everything is fine, but let's do a thought experiment. Imagine that our application grew a little bit and was extended with additional elements. If it's a game, someone could include objects representing sprites, actors, or effect particles. Let's say that someone defined the following Point
class:
@dataclass
class Point:
x: float
y: float
What would happen if the instance of that class was put on the list of possible colliders? You would probably see an exception traceback similar to the following:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/.../simple_colliders.py", line 115, in <module>
for collision in find_collisions([
File "/.../simple_colliders.py", line 24, in find_collisions
return [
File "/.../simple_colliders.py", line 30, in <listcomp>
item2.bounding_box
AttributeError: 'Point' object has no attribute 'bounding_box
That provides some clue about what the issue is. The question is if we could do better and catch such problems earlier? We could at least verify all input objects' find_collisions()
functions to check if they are collidable. But how to do that?
Because none of the collidable classes share a common ancestor, we cannot easily use the isinstance()
function to see if their types match. We can check for the bounding_box
attribute using the hasattr()
function, but doing that deeply enough to see whether that attribute has the correct structure would lead us to ugly code.
Here is where zope.interface
comes in handy. The core class of the zope.interface
package is the Interface
class. It allows you to explicitly define a new interface. Let's define an ICollidable
class that will be our declaration of anything that can be used in our collision system:
from zope.interface import Interface, Attribute
class ICollidable(Interface):
bounding_box = Attribute("Object's bounding box")
The common convention for Zope is to prefix interface classes with I
. The Attribute
constructor denotes the desired attribute of the objects implementing the interface. Any method defined in the interface class will be used as an interface method declaration. Those methods should be empty. The common convention is to use only the docstring of the method body.
When you have such an interface defined, you must denote which of your concrete classes implement that interface. This style of interface implementation is called explicit interfaces and is similar in nature to traits in Java. In order to denote the implementation of a specific interface, you need to use the implementer()
class decorator. In our case, this will look as follows:
from zope.interface import implementer
@implementer(ICollidable)
@dataclass
class Square:
...
@implementer(ICollidable)
@dataclass
class Rect:
...
@implementer(ICollidable)
@dataclass
class Circle:
...
The bodies of the dataclasses in the above example have been truncated for the sake of brevity.
It is common to say that the interface defines a contract that a concrete implementation needs to fulfill. The main benefit of this design pattern is being able to verify consistency between contract and implementation before the object is used. With the ordinary duck-typing approach, you only find inconsistencies when there is a missing attribute or method at runtime.
With zope.interface
, you can introspect the actual implementation using two methods from the zope.interface.verify
module to find inconsistencies early on:
verifyClass(interface, class_object)
: This verifies the class object for the existence of methods and correctness of their signatures without looking for attributes.verifyObject(interface, instance)
: This verifies the methods, their signatures, and also attributes of the actual object instance.
It means that we can extend the find_collisions()
function to perform initial verification of object interfaces before further processing. We can do that as follows:
from zope.interface.verify import verifyObject
def find_collisions(objects):
for item in objects:
verifyObject(ICollidable, item)
...
Now, if someone passes to the find_collisions()
function an instance of the class that does not have the @implementer(ICollidable)
decorator, they will receive an exception traceback similar to this one:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/.../colliders_interfaces.py", line 120, in <module>
for collision in find_collisions([
File "/.../colliders_interfaces.py", line 26, in find_collisions
verifyObject(ICollidable, item)
File "/.../site-packages/zope/interface/verify.py", line 172, in verifyObject
return _verify(iface, candidate, tentative, vtype='o')
File "/.../site-packages/zope/interface/verify.py", line 92, in _verify
raise MultipleInvalid(iface, candidate, excs)
zope.interface.exceptions.MultipleInvalid: The object Point(x=100, y=200) has failed to implement interface <InterfaceClass __main__.ICollidable>:
Does not declaratively implement the interface
The __main__.ICollidable.bounding_box attribute was not provided
The last two lines tell us about two errors:
- Declaration error: Invalid item isn't explicitly declared to implement the interface and that's an error.
- Structural error: Invalid item doesn't have all elements that the interface requires.
The latter error guards us from incomplete interfaces. If the Point
class had the @implementer(ICollidable)
decorator but didn't include the bounding_box()
property, we would still receive the exception.
The verifyClass()
and verifyObject()
methods only verify the surface area of the interface and aren't able to traverse into attribute types. You optionally do a more in-depth verification using the validateInvariants()
method that every interface class of zope.interface
provides. It allows hook-in functions to validate the values of interfaces. So if we would like to be extra safe, we could use the following pattern of interfaces and their validation:
from zope.interface import Interface, Attribute, invariant
from zope.interface.verify import verifyObject
class IBBox(Interface):
x1 = Attribute("lower-left x coordinate")
y1 = Attribute("lower-left y coordinate")
x2 = Attribute("upper-right x coordinate")
y2 = Attribute("upper-right y coordinate")
class ICollidable(Interface):
bounding_box = Attribute("Object's bounding box")
invariant(lambda self: verifyObject(IBBox, self.bounding_box))
def find_collisions(objects):
for item in objects:
verifyObject(ICollidable, item)
ICollidable.validateInvariants(item)
...
Thanks to using the validateInvariants()
method, we are able to check if input items have all attributes necessary to satisfy the ICollidable
interface, and also verify whether the structure of those attributes (here bounding_box
) satisfies deeper constraints. In our case, we use invariant()
to verify the nested interface.
Using zope.interface
is an interesting way to decouple your application. It allows you to enforce proper object interfaces without the need for the overblown complexity of multiple inheritance, and also allows you to catch inconsistencies early.
The biggest downside of zope.interface
is the requirement to explicitly declare interface implementors. This is especially troublesome if you need to verify instances coming from the external classes of built-in libraries. The library provides some solutions for that problem, although they make code eventually overly verbose. You can, of course, handle such issues on your own by using the adapter pattern, or even monkey-patching external classes. Anyway, the simplicity of such solutions is at least debatable.
Using function annotations and abstract base classes
Formal interfaces are meant to enable loose coupling in large applications, and not to provide you with more layers of complexity. zope.interface
is a great concept and may greatly fit some projects, but it is not a silver bullet. By using it, you may shortly find yourself spending more time on fixing issues with incompatible interfaces for third-party classes and providing never-ending layers of adapters instead of writing the actual implementation.
If you feel that way, then this is a sign that something went wrong. Fortunately, Python supports building a lightweight alternative to the explicit interfaces. It's not a full-fledged solution such as zope.interface
or its alternatives but generally provides more flexible applications. You may need to write a bit more code, but in the end, you will have something that is more extensible, better handles external types, and maybe more future-proof.
Note that Python, at its core, does not have an explicit notion of interfaces, and probably never will have, but it has some of the features that allow building something that resembles the functionality of interfaces. The features are as follows:
- ABCs
- Function annotations
- Type annotations
The core of our solution is abstract base classes, so we will feature them first.
As you probably know, direct type comparison is considered harmful and not Pythonic. You should always avoid comparisons as in the following example:
assert type(instance) == list
Comparing types in functions or methods this way completely breaks the ability to pass a class subtype as an argument to the function. A slightly better approach is to use the isinstance()
function, which will take the inheritance into account:
assert isinstance(instance, list)
The additional advantage of isinstance()
is that you can use a larger range of types to check the type compatibility. For instance, if your function expects to receive some sort of sequence as the argument, you can compare it against the list of basic types:
assert isinstance(instance, (list, tuple, range))
And such type compatibility checking is OK in some situations but is still not perfect. It will work with any subclass of list
, tuple
, or range
, but will fail if the user passes something that behaves exactly the same as one of these sequence types but does not inherit from any of them. For instance, let's relax our requirements and say that you want to accept any kind of iterable as an argument. What would you do?
The list of basic types that are iterable is actually pretty long. You need to cover list
, tuple
, range
, str
, bytes
, dict
, set
, generators
, and a lot more. The list of applicable built-in types is long, and even if you cover all of them, it will still not allow checking against the custom class that defines the __iter__()
method but inherits directly from object
.
And this is the kind of situation where ABCs are the proper solution. ABC is a class that does not need to provide a concrete implementation, but instead defines a blueprint of a class that may be used to check against type compatibility. This concept is very similar to the concept of abstract classes and virtual methods known in the C++ language.
Abstract base classes are used for two purposes:
- Checking for implementation completeness
- Checking for implicit interface compatibility
The usage of ABCs is quite simple. You start by defining a new class that either inherits from the abc.ABC
base class or has abc.ABCMeta
as its metaclass. We won't be discussing metaclasses until Chapter 8, Elements of Metaprogramming, so in this chapter, we'll be using only classic inheritance.
The following is an example of a basic abstract class that defines an interface that doesn't do anything particularly special:
from abc import ABC, abstractmethod
class DummyInterface(ABC):
@abstractmethod
def dummy_method(self): ...
@property
@abstractmethod
def dummy_property(self): ...
The @abstractmethod
decorator denotes a part of the interface that must be implemented (by overriding) in classes that will subclass our ABC. If a class will have a nonoverridden method or property, you won't be able to instantiate it. Any attempt to do so will result in a TypeError
exception.
This approach is a great way to ensure implementation completeness and is as explicit as the zope.interface
alternative. If we would like to use ABCs instead of zope.interface
in the example from the previous section, we could do the following modification of class definitions:
from abc import ABC, abstractmethod
from dataclasses import dataclass
class ColliderABC(ABC):
@property
@abstractmethod
def bounding_box(self): ...
@dataclass
class Square(ColliderABC):
...
@dataclass
class Rect(ColliderABC):
...
@dataclass
class Circle(ColliderABC):
...
The bodies and properties of the Square
, Rect
, and Circle
classes don't change as the essence of our interface doesn't change at all. What has changed is the way explicit interface declaration is done. We now use inheritance instead of the zope.interface.implementer()
class decorator. If we still want to verify if the input of find_collisions()
conforms to the interface, we need to use the isinstance()
function. That will be a fairly simple modification:
def find_collisions(objects):
for item in objects:
if not isinstance(item, ColliderABC):
raise TypeError(f"{item} is not a collider")
...
We had to use subclassing so coupling between components is a bit more tight but still comparable to that of zope.interface
. As far as we rely on interfaces and not on concrete implementations (so, ColliderABC
instead of Square
, Rect
, or Circle
), coupling is still considered loose.
But things could be more flexible. This is Python and we have full introspection power. Duck typing in Python allows us to use any object that "quacks like a duck" as if it was a duck. Unfortunately, usually it is in the spirit of "try and see." We assume that the object in the given context matches the expected interface. And the whole purpose of formal interfaces was to actually have a contract that we can validate against. Is there a way to check whether an object matches the interface without actually trying to use it first?
Yes. To some extent. Abstract base classes provide the special __subclasshook__(cls)
method. It allows you to inject your own logic into the procedure that determines whether the object is an instance of a given class. Unfortunately, you need to provide the logic all by yourself, as the abc
creators did not want to constrain the developers in overriding the whole isinstance()
mechanism. We have full power over it, but we are forced to write some boilerplate code.
Although you can do whatever you want to, usually the only reasonable thing to do in the __subclasshook__()
method is to follow the common pattern. In order to verify whether the given class is implicitly compatible with the given abstract base class, we will have to check if it has all the methods of the abstract base class.
The standard procedure is to check whether the set of defined methods are available somewhere in the Method Resolution Order (MRO) of the given class. If we would like to extend our ColliderABC
interface with a subclass hook, we could do the following:
class ColliderABC(ABC):
@property
@abstractmethod
def bounding_box(self): ...
@classmethod
def __subclasshook__(cls, C):
if cls is ColliderABC:
if any("bounding_box" in B.__dict__ for B in C.__mro__):
return True
return NotImplemented
With the __subclasshook__()
method defined that way, ColliderABC
becomes an implicit interface. This means that any object will be considered an instance of ColliderABC
as long as it has the structure that passes the subclass hook check. Thanks to this, we can add new components compatible with the ColliderABC
interface without explicitly inheriting from it. The following is an example of the Line
class that would be considered a valid subclass of ColliderABC
:
@dataclass
class Line:
p1: Point
p2: Point
@property
def bounding_box(self):
return Box(
self.p1.x,
self.p1.y,
self.p2.x,
self.p2.y,
)
As you can see, the Line
dataclass does not mention ColliderABC
anywhere in its code. But you can verify the implicit interface compatibility of Line
instances by comparing them against ColliderABC
using the isinstance()
function as in the following example:
>>> line = Line(Point(0, 0), Point(100, 100))
>>> line.bounding_box
Box(x1=0, y1=0, x2=100, y2=100)
>>> isinstance(line, ColliderABC)
True
We worked with properties, but the same approach may be used for methods as well. Unfortunately, this approach to the verification of type compatibility and implementation completeness does not take into account the signatures of class methods. So, if the number of expected arguments is different in the implementation, it will still be considered compatible. In most cases, this is not an issue, but if you need such fine-grained control over interfaces, the zope.interface
package allows for that. As already said, the __subclasshook__()
method does not constrain you in adding much more complexity to the isinstance()
function's logic to achieve a similar level of control.
Using collections.abc
ABCs are like small building blocks for creating a higher level of abstraction. They allow you to implement really usable interfaces, but are very generic and designed to handle a lot more than this single design pattern. You can unleash your creativity and do magical things, but building something generic and really usable may require a lot of work that may never pay off. Python's Standard Library and Python's built-in types fully embrace the abstract base classes.
The collections.abc
module provides a lot of predefined ABCs that allow checking for the compatibility of types with common Python interfaces. With the base classes provided in this module, you can check, for example, whether a given object is callable, mapping, or whether it supports iteration. Using them with the isinstance()
function is way better than comparing against the base Python types. You should definitely know how to use these base classes even if you don't want to define your own custom interfaces with abc.ABC
.
The most common abstract base classes from collections.abc
that you will use quite often are:
Container
: This interface means that the object supports thein
operator and implements the__contains__()
method.Iterable
: This interface means that the object supports iteration and implements the__iter__()
method.Callable
: This interface means that it can be called like a function and implements the__call__()
method.Hashable
: This interface means that the object is hashable (that is, it can be included in sets and as a key in dictionaries) and implements the__hash__
method.Sized
: This interface means that the object has a size (that is, it can be a subject of thelen()
function) and implements the__len__()
method.
A full list of the available abstract base classes from the collections.abc
module is available in the official Python documentation under https://docs.python.org/3/library/collections.abc.html.
The collections.abc
module shows pretty well where ABCs work best: creating contracts for small and simple protocols of objects. They won't be good tools to conveniently ensure the fine-grained structure of a large interface. They also don't come with utilities that would allow you to easily verify attributes or perform in-depth validation of function arguments and return types.
Fortunately, there is a completely different solution available for this problem: static type analysis and the typing.Protocol
type.
Interfaces through type annotations
Type annotations in Python proved to be extremely useful in increasing the quality of software. More and more professional programmers use mypy
or other static type analysis tools by default, leaving conventional type-less programming for prototypes and quick throwaway scripts.
Support for typing in the standard library and community projects grew greatly in recent years. Thanks to this, the flexibility of typing annotations increases with every Python release. It also allows you to use typing annotations in completely new contexts.
One such context is using type annotations to perform structural subtyping (or static duck-typing). That's simply another approach to the concept of implicit interfaces. It also offers minimal simple-minded runtime check possibilities in the spirit of ABC subclass hooks.
The core of structural subtyping is the typing.Protocol
type. By subclassing this type, you can create a definition of your interface. The following is an example of base Protocol
interfaces we could use in our previous examples of the collision detection system:
from typing import Protocol, runtime_checkable
@runtime_checkable
class IBox(Protocol):
x1: float
y1: float
x2: float
y2: float
@runtime_checkable
class ICollider(Protocol):
@property
def bounding_box(self) -> IBox: ...
This time we have used two interfaces. Tools like mypy
will be able to perform deep type verification so we can use additional interfaces to increase the type safety. The @runtime_checkable
decorator extends the protocol class with isinstance()
checks. It is something we had to perform manually for ABCs using subclass hooks in the previous section. Here it comes almost for free.
We will learn more about the usage of static type analysis tools in Chapter 10, Testing and Quality Automation.
To take full advantage of static type analysis, we also must annotate the rest of the code with proper annotations. The following is the full collision checking code with runtime interface validation based on protocol classes:
import itertools
from dataclasses import dataclass
from typing import Iterable, Protocol, runtime_checkable
@runtime_checkable
class IBox(Protocol):
x1: float
y1: float
x2: float
y2: float
@runtime_checkable
class ICollider(Protocol):
@property
def bounding_box(self) -> IBox: ...
def rects_collide(rect1: IBox, rect2: IBox):
"""Check collision between rectangles
Rectangle coordinates:
┌───(x2, y2)
│ │
(x1, y1)──┘
"""
return (
rect1.x1 < rect2.x2 and
rect1.x2 > rect2.x1 and
rect1.y1 < rect2.y2 and
rect1.y2 > rect2.y1
)
def find_collisions(objects: Iterable[ICollider]):
for item in objects:
if not isinstance(item, ICollider):
raise TypeError(f"{item} is not a collider")
return [
(item1, item2)
for item1, item2
in itertools.combinations(objects, 2)
if rects_collide(
item1.bounding_box,
item2.bounding_box
)
]
We haven't included the code of the Rect
, Square
, and Circle
classes, because their implementation doesn't have to change. And that's the real beauty of implicit interfaces: there is no explicit interface declaration in a concrete class beyond the inherent interface that comes from the actual implementation.
In the end, we could use any of the previous Rect
, Square
, and Circle
class iterations (plain dataclasses, zope-declared classes, or ABC-descendants). They all would work with structural subtyping through the typing.Protocol
class.
As you can see, despite the fact that Python lacks native support for interfaces (in the same way as, for instance, Java or the Go language do), we have plenty of ways to standardize contracts of classes, methods, and functions. This ability becomes really useful when implementing various design patterns to solve commonly occurring programming problems. Design patterns are all about reusability and the use of interfaces can help in structuring them into design templates that can be reused over and over again.
But the use of interfaces (and analogous solutions) doesn't end with design patterns. The ability to create a well-defined and verifiable contract for a single unit of code (function, class, or method) is also a crucial element of specific programming paradigms and techniques. Notable examples are inversion of control and dependency injection. These two concepts are tightly coupled so we will discuss them in the next section together.