With yet another decorator!
def yad(decorators):
def decorator(f):
for d in reversed(decorators):
f = d(f)
return f
return decorator
example usage
list_of_decorators = [foo, bar]
@yad(list_of_decorators)
def foo():
print 'foo'
Without the decorator syntax, it would look like
func = yad(list_of_decorators)(func)
If you wanted to apply the same list to multiple functions, you can do it like:
dec = yad(list_of_decorators)
func1 = dec(func1)
@dec
def func2():
pass
As recursive points out in the comments, you can define yad
(I'm sure there's a better name for this) to accept *decorators
instead of decorators
. Then you don't have to use brackets if you're creating the list in situ. The way that I've demonstrated is better if the list is created elsewhere.