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Getting Started |
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=============== |
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To implement your decorator you need to first define a wrapper function. |
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This will be called each time a decorated function is called. The wrapper |
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function needs to take four positional arguments: |
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* ``wrapped`` - The wrapped function which in turns needs to be called by your wrapper function. |
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* ``instance`` - The object to which the wrapped function was bound when it was called. |
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* ``args`` - The list of positional arguments supplied when the decorated function was called. |
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* ``kwargs`` - The dictionary of keyword arguments supplied when the decorated function was called. |
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The wrapper function would do whatever it needs to, but would usually in |
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turn call the wrapped function that is passed in via the ``wrapped`` |
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argument. |
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The decorator ``@wrapt.decorator`` then needs to be applied to the wrapper |
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function to convert it into a decorator which can in turn be applied to |
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other functions. |
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:: |
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import wrapt |
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@wrapt.decorator |
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def pass_through(wrapped, instance, args, kwargs): |
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return wrapped(*args, **kwargs) |
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@pass_through |
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def function(): |
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pass |
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If you wish to implement a decorator which accepts arguments, then wrap the |
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definition of the decorator in a function closure. Any arguments supplied |
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to the outer function when the decorator is applied, will be available to |
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the inner wrapper when the wrapped function is called. |
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:: |
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import wrapt |
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def with_arguments(myarg1, myarg2): |
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@wrapt.decorator |
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def wrapper(wrapped, instance, args, kwargs): |
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return wrapped(*args, **kwargs) |
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return wrapper |
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@with_arguments(1, 2) |
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def function(): |
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pass |
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When applied to a normal function or static method, the wrapper function |
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when called will be passed ``None`` as the ``instance`` argument. |
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When applied to an instance method, the wrapper function when called will |
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be passed the instance of the class the method is being called on as the |
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``instance`` argument. This will be the case even when the instance method |
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was called explicitly via the class and the instance passed as the first |
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argument. That is, the instance will never be passed as part of ``args``. |
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When applied to a class method, the wrapper function when called will be |
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passed the class type as the ``instance`` argument. |
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When applied to a class, the wrapper function when called will be passed |
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``None`` as the ``instance`` argument. The ``wrapped`` argument in this |
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case will be the class. |
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The above rules can be summarised with the following example. |
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:: |
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import inspect |
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@wrapt.decorator |
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def universal(wrapped, instance, args, kwargs): |
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if instance is None: |
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if inspect.isclass(wrapped): |
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return wrapped(*args, **kwargs) |
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else: |
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return wrapped(*args, **kwargs) |
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else: |
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if inspect.isclass(instance): |
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return wrapped(*args, **kwargs) |
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else: |
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return wrapped(*args, **kwargs) |
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Using these checks it is therefore possible to create a universal decorator |
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that can be applied in all situations. It is no longer necessary to create |
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different variants of decorators for normal functions and instance methods, |
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or use additional wrappers to convert a function decorator into one that |
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will work for instance methods. |
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In all cases, the wrapped function passed to the wrapper function is called |
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in the same way, with ``args`` and ``kwargs`` being passed. The |
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``instance`` argument doesn't need to be used in calling the wrapped |
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function. |
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