I am writing a python script where I am using a decorator(retry is the one I am using) that takes a parameter (tries). I want the parameter to be configurable from a command line argument. The only way I can figure out how to set the parameter for the decorator is by reading my arguments into a global variable. I hate this from a design perspective. It makes writing unit tests and anything else that wants to import any functions from my script reliant on the command line arguments being all the same.
Here is a dumbed down example of the problem I am having:
import argparse
from functools import wraps
def get_args():
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('-t', '--test_value', dest='test_value', required=True, default="sample value")
args = parser.parse_args()
return args
args = get_args()
def decorator_example(test_value):
def deco_example(f):
@wraps(f)
def f_example(*args, **kwargs):
print "The value I need is", test_value
return f(*args, **kwargs)
return f_example
return deco_example
@decorator_example(args.test_value)
def test():
print "running test"
if __name__ == '__main__':
test()
If anyone can think of a better way to do this without having args be a global, please share! I have exhausted the internet searching for a better way... I want to call getargs()
in main and pass the arguments around as needed....
args
that sometimes mean the args to a function and sometimes theargparse
args to the program…args
obviously has to be accessible to wherever you're using it. If you're using it in a decorator for a global function (as you are), it has to be a global. In the same way thattest
has to be a global if you want to call it from the top level. How else could it possibly work?get_args().test_value
in the body off_example
?