vote up 6 vote down star
4

Hello,

my Python class has some variables that require work to calculate the first time they are called. Subsequent calls should just return the precomputed value.

I don't want to waste time doing this work unless they are actually needed by the user. So is there a clean Pythonic way to implement this use case?

My initial thought was to use property() to call a function the first time and then override the variable:

class myclass(object):
    def get_age(self):
        self.age = 21 # raise an AttributeError here
        return self.age

    age = property(get_age)

Thanks

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2  
Are you asking about memoization? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memoization. This is pretty common OO design pattern. – S.Lott Oct 21 at 2:05

4 Answers

vote up 9 vote down check
class myclass(object):
    def __init__(self):
        self.__age=None
    @property
    def age(self):
        if self.__age is None:
            self.__age=21  #This can be a long computation
        return self.__age

Alex mentioned you can use __getattr__, this is how it works

class myclass(object):
    def __getattr__(self, attr):
        if attr=="age":
            self.age=21   #This can be a long computation
        return super(myclass, self).__getattribute__(attr)

__getattr__() is invoked when the attribute doesn't exist on the object, ie. the first time you try to access age. Every time after, age exists so __getattr__ doesn't get called

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thanks - __getattr__() works best for me – Richard Oct 21 at 2:09
1  
the call to return getattr(self, attr) would cause an infinite loop if attr doesn't exist. Use return super(MyClass, self).__getattr__(attr) instead. – nosklo Oct 21 at 2:31
Fixed, thanks nosklo – gnibbler Oct 21 at 3:36
No doubt getattr should return self.age if attr=='age', rather than calling super's getattr. – ~unutbu Oct 22 at 20:53
@~unutbu, The super.__getattr__ does return self.age once it has been created – gnibbler Oct 22 at 21:03
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vote up 3 vote down

Here is decorator from Python Cookbook for this problem:

class CachedAttribute(object):
    ''' Computes attribute value and caches it in the instance. '''
    def __init__(self, method, name=None):
        # record the unbound-method and the name
        self.method = method
        self.name = name or method.__name__
    def __get__(self, inst, cls):
        if inst is None:
            # instance attribute accessed on class, return self
            return self
        # compute, cache and return the instance's attribute value
        result = self.method(inst)
        setattr(inst, self.name, result)
        return result
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vote up 6 vote down

property, as you've seen, will not let you override it. You need to use a slightly different approach, such as:

class myclass(object):

    @property
    def age(self):
      if not hasattr(self, '_age'):
        self._age = self._big_long_computation()
      return self._age

There are other approaches, such as __getattr__ or a custom descriptor class, but this one is simpler!-)

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1  
huh, that is a syntax error? – nosklo Oct 21 at 2:32
@nosklo, oops, been doing too much C lately -- fixed, tx – Alex Martelli Oct 21 at 2:35
vote up 2 vote down

Yes you can use properties, though lazy evaluation is also often accomplished using descriptors, see e.g:

http://blog.pythonisito.com/2008/08/lazy-descriptors.html

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