Updated description

This commit is contained in:
Jonny Heggheim 2023-09-18 10:43:05 +03:00
parent 050f06ff37
commit 1e098c2653

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@ -14,26 +14,23 @@ BuildRequires: python3-test
%global _description %{expand:
The `typing_extensions` module serves two related purposes:
The typing_extensions module serves two related purposes:
- Enable use of new type system features on older Python versions. For example,
`typing.TypeGuard` is new in Python 3.10, but `typing_extensions` allows
users on previous Python versions to use it too.
- Enable experimentation with new type system PEPs before they are accepted and
added to the `typing` module.
Enable use of new type system features on older Python versions.
For example, typing.TypeGuard is new in Python 3.10, but typing_extensions
allows users on previous Python versions to use it too.
`typing_extensions` is treated specially by static type checkers such as
mypy and pyright. Objects defined in `typing_extensions` are treated the same
way as equivalent forms in `typing`.
Enable experimentation with new type system PEPs before they are accepted and
added to the typing module.
`typing_extensions` uses
[Semantic Versioning](https://semver.org/). The
major version will be incremented only for backwards-incompatible changes.
Therefore, it's safe to depend
on `typing_extensions` like this: `typing_extensions >=x.y, <(x+1)`,
where `x.y` is the first version that includes all features you need.
typing_extensions is treated specially by static type checkers such as mypy and
pyright. Objects defined in typing_extensions are treated the same way as
equivalent forms in typing.
`typing_extensions` supports Python versions 3.7 and higher.}
typing_extensions uses Semantic Versioning. The major version will be
incremented only for backwards-incompatible changes. Therefore, it's safe to
depend on typing_extensions like this: typing_extensions >=x.y, <(x+1),
where x.y is the first version that includes all features you need.}
%description %_description