--- layout: documentation title: Extensions - Backward compatibility --- # Backward compatibility Bazel is still in Beta and we are going to do breaking changes. As we make changes and polish the extension mechanism, old features may be removed and new features that are not backwards-compatible may be added. Each release, new incompatible changes will be behind a flag with its default value set to `false`. In later releases, the flag will be enabled by default, or the flag will be removed entirely. To check if your code will be compatible with future releases: * build your code with the flag `--all_incompatible_changes`, or * use boolean flags to enable/disable specific incompatible changes. This following are the planned incompatible changes that are implemented and guarded behind flags. ## Set constructor We are removing the `set` constructor. Use `depset` instead. `set` and `depset` are equivalent, you just need to do search and replace to update the old code. We are doing this to reduce confusion between the specialized [depset](depsets.md) data structure and Python's set datatype. * Flag: `--incompatible_disallow_set_constructor` * Default: `false` ## Keyword-only arguments Keyword-only parameters are parameters that can be called only using their name. ``` python def foo(arg1, *, arg2): pass foo(3, arg2=3) ``` ``` python def bar(arg1, *rest, arg2): pass bar(3, arg2=3) ``` In both examples, `arg2` must be named at the call site. To preserve syntactic compatibility with Python 2, we are removing this feature (which we have never documented). * Flag: `--incompatible_disallow_keyword_only_args` * Default: `false` ## Mutating `+=` We are changing `left += right` when `left` is a list. The old behavior is equivalent to `left = left + right`, which creates a new list and assigns it to `left`. The new behavior does not rebind `left`, but instead just mutates the list in-place. ``` python def fct(): li = [1] alias = li li += [2] # Old behavior: alias == [1] # New behavior: alias == [1, 2] ``` This change makes Skylark more compatible with Python and avoids performance issues. The `+=` operator for tuples is unaffected. * Flag: `--incompatible_list_plus_equals_inplace` * Default: `false` ## Dictionary concatenation We are removing the `+` operator on dictionaries. This includes the `+=` form where the left-hand side is a dictionary. This is done to improve compatibility with Python. A possible workaround is to use the `.update` method instead. * Flag: `--incompatible_disallow_dict_plus` * Default: `false` ## Load argument is a label Historically, the first argument of `load` could be a path with an implicit `.bzl` suffix. We are going to require that all `load` statements use the label syntax. ``` python load("/path/foo", "var") # deprecated load("//path:foo.bzl", "var") # recommended ``` * Flag: `--incompatible_load_argument_is_label` * Default: `false` ## Top level `if` statements This change forbids `if` statements at the top level of `.bzl` files (they are already forbidden in `BUILD` files). This change ensures that every global value has a single declaration. This restriction is consistent with the idea that global values cannot be redefined. * Flag: `--incompatible_disallow_toplevel_if_statement` * Default: `true` ## Comprehensions variables This change makes list and dict comprehensions follow Python 3's semantics instead of Python 2's. That is, comprehensions have their own local scopes, and variables bound by comprehensions are not accessible in the outer scope. As a temporary measure to help detect breakage, this change also causes variables defined in the immediate outer scope to become inaccessible if they are shadowed by any variables in a comprehension. This disallows any uses of the variable's name where its meaning would differ under the Python 2 and Python 3 semantics. Variables above the immediate outer scope are not affected. ``` python def fct(): x = 10 y = [x for x in range(3)] return x ``` The meaning of this program depends on the flag: * Under Skylark without this flag: `x` is 10 before the comprehension and 2 afterwards. (2 is the last value assigned to `x` while evaluating the comprehension.) * Under Skylark with this flag: `x` becomes inaccessible after the comprehension, so that `return x` is an error. If we moved the `x = 10` to above the function, so that `x` became a global variable, then no error would be raised, and the returned number would be 10. In other words, please do not refer to a loop variable outside the list or dict comprehension. * Flag: `--incompatible_comprehension_variables_do_not_leak` * Default: `false` ## Depset is no longer iterable When the flag is set to true, `depset` objects are not treated as iterable. If you need an iterable, call the `.to_list()` method. This affects `for` loops and many functions, e.g. `list`, `tuple`, `min`, `max`, `sorted`, `all`, and `any`. The goal of this change is to avoid accidental iteration on `depset`, which can be expensive. ``` python deps = depset() [x.path for x in deps] # deprecated [x.path for x in deps.to_list()] # recommended sorted(deps) # deprecated sorted(deps.to_list()) # recommended ``` * Flag: `--incompatible_depset_is_not_iterable` * Default: `false` ## String is no longer iterable When the flag is set to true, `string` objects are not treated as iterable. This affects `for` loops and many functions, e.g. `list`, `tuple`, `min`, `max`, `sorted`, `all`, and `any`. String iteration has been a source of errors and confusion, such as this error: ``` python def my_macro(name, srcs): for src in srcs: # do something with src my_macro("foo") # equivalent to: my_macro(["f", "o", "o"]) ``` String indexing and `len` are still allowed. If you need to iterate over a string, you may explicitly use: ``` python my_string="hello world" for i in range(len(my_string)): char = my_string[i] # do something with char ``` * Flag: `--incompatible_string_is_not_iterable` * Default: `false` ## Dictionary literal has no duplicates When the flag is set to true, duplicated keys are not allowed in the dictionary literal syntax. ``` python {"a": 2, "b": 3, "a": 4} # error ``` When the flag is false, the last value overrides the previous value (so the example above is equivalent to `{"a": 4, "b": 3}`. This behavior has been a source of bugs, which is why we are going to forbid it. If you really want to override a value, use a separate statement: `mydict["a"] = 4`. * Flag: `--incompatible_dict_literal_has_no_duplicates` * Default: `false` ## Checked arithmetic When set, arithmetic operations (`+`, `-`, `*`) will fail in case of overflow. All integers are stored using signed 32 bits. * Flag: `--incompatible_checked_arithmetic` * Default: `true`