Comment by singhrac
Sure, but in this case they are both implementations of a spec defined by PEPs, so a bit more like gcc vs clang (less tightly bound than those, of course, in design decisions). Neither company is trying to invent a new language here.
The current major type checkers, mypy and pyright, are also based on the same PEPs, but you can still see differences between them. For example, my codebase passes pyright in strict mode, but mypy results in a bunch of type errors. I'd expect pyrefly and ty to be slightly different from each other.
See also:
https://github.com/microsoft/pyright/blob/main/docs/mypy-com...
https://htmlpreview.github.io/?https://github.com/python/typ...