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python-style-guide Comprehensive Python programming guidelines based on Google's Python Style Guide. Use when Claude needs to write Python code, review Python code for style issues, refactor Python code, or provide Python programming guidance. Covers language rules (imports, exceptions, type annotations), style rules (naming conventions, formatting, docstrings), and best practices for clean, maintainable Python code. Complete terms in LICENSE.txt

Python Style Guide

Comprehensive guidelines for writing clean, maintainable Python code based on Google's Python Style Guide.

Core Philosophy

BE CONSISTENT. Match the style of the code around you. Use these guidelines as defaults, but always prioritize consistency with existing code.

Language Rules

Imports

Use import statements for packages and modules only, not for individual classes or functions.

Yes:

from doctor.who import jodie
import sound_effects.utils

No:

from sound_effects.utils import EffectsRegistry  # Don't import classes directly

Import Formatting

  • Group imports: standard library, third-party, application-specific
  • Alphabetize within each group
  • Use absolute imports (not relative imports)
  • One import per line (except for multiple items from typing or collections.abc)
# Standard library
import os
import sys

# Third-party
import numpy as np
import tensorflow as tf

# Application-specific
from myproject.backend import api_utils

Exceptions

Use exceptions appropriately. Do not suppress errors with bare except: clauses.

Yes:

try:
    result = risky_operation()
except ValueError as e:
    logging.error(f"Invalid value: {e}")
    raise

No:

try:
    result = risky_operation()
except:  # Too broad, hides bugs
    pass

Type Annotations

Annotate all function signatures. Type annotations improve code readability and catch errors early.

General rules:

  • Annotate all public APIs
  • Use built-in types (list, dict, set) instead of typing.List, etc. (Python 3.9+)
  • Import typing symbols directly: from typing import Any, Union
  • Use None instead of type(None) or NoneType
def fetch_data(url: str, timeout: int = 30) -> dict[str, Any]:
    """Fetch data from URL."""
    ...

def process_items(items: list[str]) -> None:
    """Process a list of items."""
    ...

Default Argument Values

Never use mutable objects as default values in function definitions.

Yes:

def foo(a: int, b: list[int] | None = None) -> None:
    if b is None:
        b = []

No:

def foo(a: int, b: list[int] = []) -> None:  # Mutable default - WRONG!
    b.append(a)

True/False Evaluations

Use implicit false where possible. Empty sequences, None, and 0 are false in boolean contexts.

Yes:

if not users:  # Preferred
if not some_dict:
if value:

No:

if len(users) == 0:  # Verbose
if users == []:
if value == True:  # Never compare to True/False explicitly

Comprehensions & Generators

Use comprehensions and generators for simple cases. Keep them readable.

Yes:

result = [x for x in data if x > 0]
squares = (x**2 for x in range(10))

No:

# Too complex
result = [
    x.strip().lower() for x in data 
    if x and len(x) > 5 and not x.startswith('#')
    for y in x.split(',') if y
]  # Use a regular loop instead

Lambda Functions

Use lambdas for one-liners only. For anything complex, define a proper function.

Yes:

sorted(data, key=lambda x: x.timestamp)

Acceptable but prefer named function:

def get_timestamp(item):
    return item.timestamp

sorted(data, key=get_timestamp)

Style Rules

Line Length

Maximum line length: 80 characters. Exceptions allowed for imports, URLs, and long strings that can't be broken.

Indentation

Use 4 spaces per indentation level. Never use tabs.

For hanging indents, align wrapped elements vertically or use 4-space hanging indent:

# Aligned with opening delimiter
foo = long_function_name(var_one, var_two,
                         var_three, var_four)

# Hanging indent (4 spaces)
foo = long_function_name(
    var_one, var_two, var_three,
    var_four)

Blank Lines

  • Two blank lines between top-level definitions
  • One blank line between method definitions
  • Use blank lines sparingly within functions to show logical sections

Naming Conventions

Type Convention Examples
Packages/Modules lower_with_under my_module.py
Classes CapWords MyClass
Functions/Methods lower_with_under() my_function()
Constants CAPS_WITH_UNDER MAX_SIZE
Variables lower_with_under my_var
Private _leading_underscore _private_var

Avoid:

  • Single character names except for counters/iterators (i, j, k)
  • Dashes in any name
  • __double_leading_and_trailing_underscore__ (reserved for Python)

Comments and Docstrings

Docstring Format

Use Google-style docstrings for all public modules, functions, classes, and methods.

Function docstring:

def fetch_smalltable_rows(
    table_handle: smalltable.Table,
    keys: Sequence[bytes | str],
    require_all_keys: bool = False,
) -> Mapping[bytes, tuple[str, ...]]:
    """Fetches rows from a Smalltable.

    Retrieves rows pertaining to the given keys from the Table instance
    represented by table_handle. String keys will be UTF-8 encoded.

    Args:
        table_handle: An open smalltable.Table instance.
        keys: A sequence of strings representing the key of each table
            row to fetch. String keys will be UTF-8 encoded.
        require_all_keys: If True, raise ValueError if any key is missing.

    Returns:
        A dict mapping keys to the corresponding table row data
        fetched. Each row is represented as a tuple of strings.

    Raises:
        IOError: An error occurred accessing the smalltable.
        ValueError: A key is missing and require_all_keys is True.
    """
    ...

Class docstring:

class SampleClass:
    """Summary of class here.

    Longer class information...
    Longer class information...

    Attributes:
        likes_spam: A boolean indicating if we like SPAM or not.
        eggs: An integer count of the eggs we have laid.
    """

    def __init__(self, likes_spam: bool = False):
        """Initializes the instance based on spam preference.

        Args:
            likes_spam: Defines if instance exhibits this preference.
        """
        self.likes_spam = likes_spam
        self.eggs = 0

Block and Inline Comments

  • Use complete sentences with proper capitalization
  • Block comments indent to the same level as the code
  • Inline comments should be separated by at least 2 spaces
  • Use inline comments sparingly
# Block comment explaining the following code.
# Can span multiple lines.
x = x + 1  # Inline comment (use sparingly)

Strings

Use f-strings for formatting (Python 3.6+).

Yes:

x = f"name: {name}; score: {score}"

Acceptable:

x = "name: %s; score: %d" % (name, score)
x = "name: {}; score: {}".format(name, score)

No:

x = "name: " + name + "; score: " + str(score)  # Avoid + for formatting

Logging

Use % formatting for logging, not f-strings (allows lazy evaluation):

logging.info("Request from %s resulted in %d", ip_address, status_code)

Files and Resources

Always use context managers (with statements) for file operations:

with open("file.txt") as f:
    data = f.read()

Statements

Generally avoid multiple statements on one line.

Yes:

if foo:
    bar()

No:

if foo: bar()  # Avoid

Main

For executable scripts, use:

def main():
    ...

if __name__ == "__main__":
    main()

Function Length

Keep functions focused and reasonably sized. If a function exceeds about 40 lines, consider splitting it unless it remains very readable.

Type Annotation Details

Forward Declarations

Use string quotes for forward references:

class MyClass:
    def method(self) -> "MyClass":
        return self

Type Aliases

Create aliases for complex types:

from typing import TypeAlias

ConnectionOptions: TypeAlias = dict[str, str]
Address: TypeAlias = tuple[str, int]
Server: TypeAlias = tuple[Address, ConnectionOptions]

TypeVars

Use descriptive names for TypeVars:

from typing import TypeVar

_T = TypeVar("_T")  # Good: private, unconstrained
AddableType = TypeVar("AddableType", int, float, str)  # Good: descriptive

Generics

Always specify type parameters for generic types:

Yes:

def get_names(employee_ids: list[int]) -> dict[int, str]:
    ...

No:

def get_names(employee_ids: list) -> dict:  # Missing type parameters
    ...

Imports for Typing

Import typing symbols directly:

from collections.abc import Mapping, Sequence
from typing import Any, Union

# Use built-in types for containers (Python 3.9+)
def foo(items: list[str]) -> dict[str, int]:
    ...

Common Patterns

Properties

Use properties for simple attribute access:

class Square:
    def __init__(self, side: float):
        self._side = side
    
    @property
    def area(self) -> float:
        return self._side ** 2

Conditional Expressions

Use ternary operators for simple conditions:

x = "yes" if condition else "no"

Context Managers

Create custom context managers when appropriate:

from contextlib import contextmanager

@contextmanager
def managed_resource(*args, **kwargs):
    resource = acquire_resource(*args, **kwargs)
    try:
        yield resource
    finally:
        release_resource(resource)

Linting

Run pylint on all Python code. Suppress warnings only when necessary with clear explanations:

dict = 'something'  # pylint: disable=redefined-builtin

Summary

When writing Python code:

  1. Use type annotations for all functions
  2. Follow naming conventions consistently
  3. Write clear docstrings for all public APIs
  4. Keep functions focused and reasonably sized
  5. Use comprehensions for simple cases
  6. Prefer implicit false in boolean contexts
  7. Use f-strings for formatting
  8. Always use context managers for resources
  9. Run pylint and fix issues
  10. BE CONSISTENT with existing code

Additional Resources

For detailed reference on specific topics, see:

  • references/advanced_types.md - Advanced type annotation patterns including Protocol, TypedDict, Literal, ParamSpec, and more
  • references/antipatterns.md - Common Python mistakes and their fixes
  • references/docstring_examples.md - Comprehensive docstring examples for all Python constructs