Python 201: Decorators

Python decorators are really cool, but they can be a little hard to understand at first. A decorator in Python is a function that accepts another function as an argument. The decorator will usually modify or enhance the function it accepted and return the modified function. This means that when you call a decorated function, you will get a function that may be a little different that may have additional features compared with the base definition. But let’s back up a bit. We should probably review the basic building block of a decorator, namely, the function.


A Simple Function

A function is a block of code that begins with the Python keyword def followed by the actual name of the function. A function can accept zero or more arguments, keyword arguments or a mixture of the two. A function always returns something. If you do not specify what a function should return, it will return None. Here is a very simple function that just returns a string:

#----------------------------------------------------------------------
def a_function():
    """A pretty useless function"""
    return "1+1"

#----------------------------------------------------------------------
if __name__ == "__main__":
    value = a_function()
    print(value)

We call the function and print the return value. Let’s create another function:

#----------------------------------------------------------------------
def another_function(func):
    """
    A function that accepts another function
    """
    def other_func():
        val = "The result of %s is %s" % (func(),
                                          eval(func())
                                          )
        return val
    return other_func

This function accepts one argument and that argument has to be a function or callable. In fact, it really should only be called using the previously defined function. You will note that this function has a nested function inside of it that we are calling other_func. It will take the result of the function passed to it, evaluate it and create a string that tells us about what it did, which it then returns. Let’s look at the full version of the code:

#----------------------------------------------------------------------
def another_function(func):
    """
    A function that accepts another function
    """
    
    def other_func():
        val = "The result of %s is %s" % (func(),
                                          eval(func())
                                          )
        return val
    return other_func

#----------------------------------------------------------------------
def a_function():
    """A pretty useless function"""
    return "1+1"

#----------------------------------------------------------------------
if __name__ == "__main__":
    value = a_function()
    print(value)
    decorator = another_function(a_function)
    print decorator()

This is how a decorator works. We create one function and then pass it into a second function. The second function is the decorator function. The decorator will modify or enhance the function that was passed to it and return the modification. If you run this code, you should see the following as output to stdout:

1+1
The result of 1+1 is 2

Let’s change the code slightly to turn another_function into a decorator:

#----------------------------------------------------------------------
def another_function(func):
    """
    A function that accepts another function
    """
    
    def other_func():
        val = "The result of %s is %s" % (func(),
                                          eval(func())
                                          )
        return val
    return other_func

#----------------------------------------------------------------------
@another_function
def a_function():
    """A pretty useless function"""
    return "1+1"

#----------------------------------------------------------------------
if __name__ == "__main__":
    value = a_function()
    print(value)

You will note that in Python, a decorator starts with the @ symbol followed by the name of the function that we will be using to “decorate” our regular with. To apply the decorator, you just put it on the line before the function definition. Now when we call a_function, it will get decorated and we’ll get the following result:

The result of 1+1 is 2

Let’s create a decorator that actually does something useful.


Creating a Logging Decorator

Sometimes you will want to create a log of what a function is doing. Most of the time, you will probably be doing your logging within the function itself. Occasionally you might want to do it at the function level to get an idea of the flow of the program or perhaps to fulfill some business rules, like auditing. Here’s a little decorator that we can use to record any function’s name and what it returns:

import logging

#----------------------------------------------------------------------
def log(func):
    """
    Log what function is called
    """
    def wrap_log(*args, **kwargs):
        name = func.__name__
        logger = logging.getLogger(name)
        logger.setLevel(logging.INFO)
        
        # add file handler
        fh = logging.FileHandler("%s.log" % name)
        fmt = '%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s'
        formatter = logging.Formatter(fmt)
        fh.setFormatter(formatter)
        logger.addHandler(fh)
        
        logger.info("Running function: %s" % name)
        result = func(*args, **kwargs)
        logger.info("Result: %s" % result)
        return func
    return wrap_log
    
#----------------------------------------------------------------------
@log
def double_function(a):
    """
    Double the input parameter
    """
    return a*2

#----------------------------------------------------------------------
if __name__ == "__main__":
    value = double_function(2)

This little script has a log function that accepts a function as its sole argument. It will create a logger object and a log file name based on the name of the function. Then the log function will log what function was called and what the function returned, if anything.


Built-in Decorators

Python comes with several built-in decorators. The big three are:

  • @classmethod
  • @staticmethod
  • @property

There are also decorators in various parts of Python’s standard library. One example would be functools.wraps. We will be limiting our scope to the three above though.


@classmethod and @staticmethod

I have never actually used these myself, so I did a fair bit of research. The @classmethod decorator can be called with with an instance of a class or directly by the class itself as its first argument. According to the Python documentation: It can be called either on the class (such as C.f()) or on an instance (such as C().f()). The instance is ignored except for its class. If a class method is called for a derived class, the derived class object is passed as the implied first argument. The primary use case of a @classmethod decorator that I have found in my research is as an alternate constructor or helper method for initialization.

The @staticmethod decorator is just a function inside of a class. You can call it both with and without instantiating the class. A typical use case is when you have a function where you believe it has a connection with a class. It’s a stylistic choice for the most part.

It might help to see a code example of how these two decorators work:

########################################################################
class DecoratorTest(object):
    """
    Test regular method vs @classmethod vs @staticmethod
    """

    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    def __init__(self):
        """Constructor"""
        pass
        
    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    def doubler(self, x):
        """"""
        print("running doubler")
        return x*2
    
    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    @classmethod
    def class_tripler(klass, x):
        """"""
        print("running tripler: %s" % klass)
        return x*3
    
    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    @staticmethod
    def static_quad(x):
        """"""
        print("running quad")
        return x*4
    
#----------------------------------------------------------------------
if __name__ == "__main__":
    decor = DecoratorTest()
    print(decor.doubler(5))
    print(decor.class_tripler(3))
    print(DecoratorTest.class_tripler(3))
    print(DecoratorTest.static_quad(2))
    print(decor.static_quad(3))
    
    print(decor.doubler)
    print(decor.class_tripler)
    print(decor.static_quad)

This example demonstrates that you can call a regular method and both decorated methods in the same way. You will notice that you can call both the @classmethod and the @staticmethod decorated functions directly with from the class or from an instance of the class. If you try to call a regular function with the class (i.e. DecoratorTest.doubler(2)) you will receive a TypeError. You will also note that the last print statement shows that decor.static_quad returns a regular function instead of a bound method.


Python’s Properties

I’ve written about the @property decorator once already this year, so I’ll just reprint a slight variation of that article here.

Python has a neat little concept called a property that can do several useful things. We will be looking into how to do the following:

  • Convert class methods into read-only attributes
  • Reimplement setters and getters into an attribute

One of the simplest ways to use a property is to use it as a decorator of a method. This allows you to turn a class method into a class attribute. I find this useful when I need to do some kind of combination of values. Others have found it useful for writing conversion methods that they want to have access to as methods. Let’s take a look at a simple example:

########################################################################
class Person(object):
    """"""

    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    def __init__(self, first_name, last_name):
        """Constructor"""
        self.first_name = first_name
        self.last_name = last_name
    
    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    @property
    def full_name(self):
        """
        Return the full name
        """
        return "%s %s" % (self.first_name, self.last_name)

In the code above, we create two class attributes or properties: self.first_name and self.last_name. Next we create a full_name method that has a @property decorator attached to it. This allows us to the following in an interpreter session:

>>> person = Person("Mike", "Driscoll")
>>> person.full_name
'Mike Driscoll'
>>> person.first_name
'Mike'
>>> person.full_name = "Jackalope"
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "", line 1, in 
AttributeError: can't set attribute

As you can see, because we turned the method into a property, we can access it using normal dot notation. However, if we try to set the property to something different, we will cause an AttributeError to be raised. The only way to change the full_name property is to do so indirectly:

>>> person.first_name = "Dan"
>>> person.full_name
'Dan Driscoll'

This is kind of limiting, so let’s look at another example where we can make a property that does allow us to set it.

Replacing Setters and Getters with a Python property

Let’s pretend that we have some legacy code that someone wrote who didn’t understand Python very well. If you’re like me, you’ve already seen this kind of code before:

from decimal import Decimal
    
########################################################################
class Fees(object):
    """"""

    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    def __init__(self):
        """Constructor"""
        self._fee = None
        
    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    def get_fee(self):
        """
        Return the current fee
        """
        return self._fee
    
    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    def set_fee(self, value):
        """
        Set the fee
        """
        if isinstance(value, str):
            self._fee = Decimal(value)
        elif isinstance(value, Decimal):
            self._fee = value

To use this class, we have to use the setters and getters that are defined:

>>> f = Fees()
>>> f.set_fee("1")
>>> f.get_fee()
Decimal('1')

If you want to add the normal dot notation access of attributes to this code without breaking all the applications that depend on this piece of code, you can change it very simply by adding a property:

from decimal import Decimal
    
########################################################################
class Fees(object):
    """"""

    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    def __init__(self):
        """Constructor"""
        self._fee = None
        
    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    def get_fee(self):
        """
        Return the current fee
        """
        return self._fee
    
    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    def set_fee(self, value):
        """
        Set the fee
        """
        if isinstance(value, str):
            self._fee = Decimal(value)
        elif isinstance(value, Decimal):
            self._fee = value
    
    fee = property(get_fee, set_fee)

We added one line to the end of this code. Now we can do stuff like this:

>>> f = Fees()
>>> f.set_fee("1")
>>> f.fee
Decimal('1')
>>> f.fee = "2"
>>> f.get_fee()
Decimal('2')

As you can see, when we use property in this manner, it allows the fee property to set and get the value itself without breaking the legacy code. Let’s rewrite this code using the property decorator and see if we can get it to allow setting.

from decimal import Decimal
    
########################################################################
class Fees(object):
    """"""

    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    def __init__(self):
        """Constructor"""
        self._fee = None
        
    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    @property
    def fee(self):
        """
        The fee property - the getter
        """
        return self._fee
        
    #----------------------------------------------------------------------
    @fee.setter
    def fee(self, value):
        """
        The setter of the fee property
        """
        if isinstance(value, str):
            self._fee = Decimal(value)
        elif isinstance(value, Decimal):
            self._fee = value
        
#----------------------------------------------------------------------
if __name__ == "__main__":
    f = Fees()

The code above demonstrates how to create a “setter” for the fee property. You can do this by decorating a second method that is also called fee with a decorator called @fee.setter. The setter is invoked when you do something like this:

>>> f = Fees()
>>> f.fee = "1"

If you look at the signature for property, it has fget, fset, fdel and doc as “arguments”. You can create another decorated method using the same name to correspond to a delete function using @fee.deleter if you want to catch the del command against the attribute.


Wrapping Up

At this point you should know how to create your own decorators and how to use a few of Python’s built-in decorators. We looked at @classmethod, @property and @staticmethod. I would be curious to know how my readers use the built-in decorators and how they use their own custom decorators.


Further Reading

4 thoughts on “Python 201: Decorators”

  1. now-a-days i am studying decorators, and this write-up came along as a blessing. Thank you so much for ur to-the-point presentation …

  2. Great explanation about decorators. I am still not seeing the big advantage with the @property decorator yet though.

  3. re-reading carefully – the @proprty decorator allows you to treat decorators in a more C-like way. ie you can make then read only, or write only. , and you can specify the deconstructor. for instance if the number of fees was in a class variable the deconstructor could decrement when a fee was deleted.

    I think I understand better.

  4. I think one of the really handy ways to use it is for wrapping code that you cannot change because the old API is used by other programs. Of course, turning a simple function into a class variable can also be useful.

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