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Our framework requires wrapping certain functions in some ugly boilerplate code:

def prefix_myname_suffix(obj):
    def actual():
        print 'hello world'
    obj.register(actual)
    return obj

I figured this might be simplified with a decorator:

@register
def myname():
    print 'hello world'

However, that turned out to be rather tricky, mainly because the framework looks for a certain pattern of function names at module level.

I've tried the following within the decorator, to no avail:

current_module = __import__(__name__)
new_name = prefix + func.__name__ + suffix
# method A
current_module[new_name] = func
# method B
func.__name__ = new_name
current_module += func

Any help would be appreciated!

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You need to explain what and how the framework "looks" for in these names a little more thoroughly. You can probably override getattr or swizzle your module's own dictionary to fake it out, but it's impossible to say for certain at this point. – NSD Oct 25 at 16:55
I honestly don't know what exactly the framework does. Oren's little reminder was what I needed. – AnC Oct 25 at 17:03

2 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

use either

current_module.new_name = func

or

setattr(current_module, new_name, func)
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Duh, of course - what was I thinking... Thanks! – AnC Oct 25 at 17:02
vote up 1 vote down

It seems the solution to your problem would be to make the decorated function act as the original function.

Try using the function mergeFunctionMetadata from Twisted, found here: twisted/python/util.py

It makes your decorated function act as the original, hopefully making the framework pick it up.

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Thanks, that looks interesting - will have to look into how best to apply this. – AnC Oct 26 at 17:51

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