I think Python's type hints are harmful. They are not checked during runtime and, as such, they are meaningless. For a while, I was open to the idea. "Better have *some* information about types than nothing at all!" But I was wrong. They are harmful. We had an application crashing today. While debugging, I read through (someone else's) code, which used type hints everywhere. I knew these guys were fans of type hints, so I (subconsciously) assumed they placed those type hints with great care and I also assumed the hints were correct. These guys also use full-blown IDEs, not just plain Vim like me, so they should have seen warnings. This was a huge red herring. It took me a while to even question the correctness of those hints. Turned out, some hints were correct, others were not. It was chaotic. So, not only does Python itself not check those hints in any meaningful way, they also caused additional confusion on my end. It would have been better if there had been no type hints in the first place. And that's just me. The next person who runs into this problem will have to make this experience *again*, because I probably cannot tell her about this in advance.