56

So i'm trying to make a function that keeps track how many times a method is called. for example:

a = [1,2,3,4]
a.pop()

i want to know how many times a.pop() was called so far so for this example, i would get 1. Is there a way to do this?

6
  • 1
    easily doable with your own functions, not so much for builtins.
    – roippi
    Feb 12, 2014 at 1:42
  • create a global variable or do pass by reference Feb 12, 2014 at 1:49
  • in the function pop, you can define a variable called counter then in the first line of that function do counter += 1. or something like that
    – user1786283
    Feb 12, 2014 at 1:50
  • @enginefree The only problem is that this doesn't work for builtin functions and it seems like that's what OP wants.
    – aidnani8
    Feb 12, 2014 at 1:58
  • @user3193087 He can embed the built-in in another function. def counter(): counter += 1 \n a.pop
    – user1786283
    Feb 12, 2014 at 2:03

14 Answers 14

81

This doesn't work for builtin functions, but an interesting approach would be:

def myfunction():
    myfunction.counter += 1
myfunction.counter = 0

You're giving the function an attribute, so every call that attribute is updated. No global variables needed.

Built-ins are read-only. They cannot be modified.

2
59

You could use a decorator that tracks how many times the function is called. Since list is a built-in, you can't decorate or replace its pop method so you'd have to use your own list class, for example.

def counted(f):
    def wrapped(*args, **kwargs):
        wrapped.calls += 1
        return f(*args, **kwargs)
    wrapped.calls = 0
    return wrapped

class MyList(list):
    @counted
    def pop(self, *args, **kwargs):
        return list.pop(self, *args, **kwargs)

x = MyList([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
for i in range(3):
    x.pop()

print x.pop.calls # prints 3
0
29

i used the following little trick to track how many times the function was called

def myfun(s,i=[0]):    
    print(s)    
    i[0]+=1 # mutable variable get evaluated ONCE
    return i[0]

>>> myfun('aaa')
aaa
1
>>> myfun('bbb')
bbb
2
3
  • 2
    This looks, in some ways, better than the top voted answer, but I'd like to understand why it works. Why is i only evaluated once?
    – Post169
    May 28, 2020 at 19:51
  • 1
    This is pretty clever
    – Charith
    Jun 3, 2021 at 0:49
  • 2
    Reason for this is mentioned in here: florimond.dev/en/posts/2018/08/…
    – Charith
    Jun 3, 2021 at 1:37
10

Here is a simple and elegant solution for a self counting function, without any decorators, global variables, etc:

def hello():
    hello.counter += 1
    print(hello.counter)
hello.counter = 0

Each time you call hello(), it will print 1, 2, etc.

Let's not forget that, in Python, a function is a first-class citizen and it has rights. And one of them is to have attributes!

If you are willing to include your method call in a function, it can be easy:

def pop_counted(a):
    pop_counted.counter += 1
    return a.pop()
pop_counted.counter = 0

Voilà!

Comment

This works because a Python function "knows" itself (this is a necessary feature, so that functions can call themselves recursively if desired).

If you wish to keep some information about a function, it might be better to keep it where it belongs: in an attribute of the function.

The advantage of not using a global variable is scope:

  • no risk of name collisions in the global namespace
  • the information you were keeping will vanish as soon as the function is taken off the stack, which is what you want -- no garbage left.

A bonus is that this approach will work in cases where a global variable is not really a good option, typically for nested functions where you can't declare a "global" in the outer function.

2
  • I am just curious to know why somebody dislikes the idea that functions can have attributes? So far, I have not pursued this idea further (pros and cons?), but it is worth discussing.
    – fralau
    Jun 21, 2019 at 13:37
  • 1
    I liked your answer. It is like the top voted answer but explains why it works which was exactly what I was wondering after reading the top answer.
    – Alex Telon
    Aug 30, 2019 at 12:39
5

For kicks, I wrote up an answer using a decorator:

class counter:
    #wraps a function, to keep a running count of how many
    #times it's been called
    def __init__(self, func):
        self.func = func
        self.count = count

    def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        self.count += 1
        return self.func(*args, **kwargs)

To use it, simply decorate a function. You can then check how many times that function has been run by examining the "count" attribute. Doing it this way is nice because:

1.) No global variables. The count is associated directly with the function.

2.) You can wrap builtin functions easily, by calling the class directly:

sum_wrapped = counter(sum)
sum_wrapped([1, 2 ,3, 4])
#outputs 10
print sum_wrapped.count
#outputs 1

Of course, this could be improved by using the Decorators module to keep the docstrings and other good things intact. Also, for an excellent overview of what decorators are, and how they work, check out this stackoverflow answer.

4

One approach is to create a proxy of the instance for which you want to count attribute access:

from collections import Counter

class CountingProxy():
    def __init__(self, instance):
        self._instance = instance
        self.count = Counter()

    def __getattr__(self, key):
        if hasattr(self._instance, key):
            self.count[key] += 1
        return getattr(self._instance, key)


>>> l = [1,2,3,4,5]
>>> cl = CountingProxy(l)
>>> cl.pop()
5
>>> cl.append(10)
>>> cl.index(3)
2
>>> cl.reverse()
>>> cl.reverse()
>>> cl.count
Counter({'reverse': 2, 'pop': 1, 'append': 1, 'index': 1})
1
  • 1
    This counts accesses and not necessarily calls, which might be an important distinction in some cases. e.g. f = cl.pop; f(); f(); f();
    – FogleBird
    Feb 12, 2014 at 3:09
2

A simple way to do this is to increment a global variable each time you call the function.

counter = 0

a = [1,2,3,4]    
a.pop()
counter += 1
2
  • I believe the OP wants to know how many times a.pop() is called, your not counting that. You are basically counting how many times your code is run in an interval.
    – user1786283
    Feb 12, 2014 at 1:52
  • Yeah i was basically making my own class and i needed to count how many times a method was called but i figured it out now. Thanks for the help everyone. Feb 12, 2014 at 1:59
2

i guess the following code will be helpful to you. you just need to make local variable global in order to access the global variable from a method

MYGLOBAL = 5

def func1():
    global MYGLOBAL
    MYGLOBAL +=10
        
def func2():
    print (MYGLOBAL)

func1()     #called the func1 three time thus the value of MYGLOBAL WILL increase 10*3=30
func1()     #called the func1 three time thus the value of MYGLOBAL WILL increase 10*3=30
func1()     #called the func1 three time thus the value of MYGLOBAL WILL increase 10*3=30

func2()     #this will printout 5+30=35
0
1
counter = 0

def pop():
  counter += 1
  print counter
  #other function code

a = [1,2,3,4]  
a.pop()

this should solve your issue and you should be able to see whats being counted. + every time you call the function the counter is going to be increased and printed with every pass of the function.

IF ITS BUILT IN:

    counter = 0
    def newfunction():
      a = [1,2,3,4]  
      a.pop()
      counter += 1
      print counter

the logic in this is that it will call your new function go into the function that is premade then step out of the built in function and then go on to mark the counter as increased. the output your counter.

1
  • 1
    iirc you have to global the variable before you can modify it in the global scope in a function
    – icedtrees
    Feb 12, 2014 at 2:31
1

Just define a global statement in your function.

count = 1
def your_func():
  global count
  print(count)
  count= count +1
0

Just define a global variable and increment it inside function.

a = 0
def some_function():
    global a
    a+=1
    <..Your code.>

This will automatically be incremented as function is used and you can access it globally.

1
  • Usage of global variables should be limited, since they can be easily tampered from outside. May 24, 2019 at 14:28
0

I did it copying the way JavaScript console.count() method works. That's my code:

class Terminal(object):
    __count_names = []
    def count(self, name='default'):
        # check if name already exists
        i = next((self.__count_names.index(item) for item in self.__count_names if item['name'] == name), None)
        # if name argument does not exist register it
        if i is None:
            dictionary = { 'name': name, 'count': 1 }
            self.__count_names.append(dictionary)
        # if exists increment 'count'
        else:
            dictionary = self.__count_names[i]
            dictionary['count'] += 1
            self.__count_names[i] = dictionary
        # finally print name and count
        print(f"{dictionary['name']} : {dictionary['count']}")

Your code should look like this:

terminal = Terminal()
def myFunc():
    terminal.count("myFunc")

myFunc()
myFunc()
myFunc("myFunc")

Output:

myFunc: 1
myFunc: 2
myFunc: 3
myFunc: 4
0

An example from Datacamp, using decorators:

def counter(func):
  def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
    wrapper.count += 1
    # Call the function being decorated and return the result
    return func(*args, **kwargs)
  wrapper.count = 0
  # Return the new decorated function
  return wrapper

# Decorate foo() with the counter() decorator
@counter
def foo():
  print('calling foo()')
  
foo()
foo()

print('foo() was called {} times.'.format(foo.count))

# output
calling foo()
calling foo()
foo() was called 2 times. 
0

I solve this with closure. This is a generic function:

def counter(fn):
    cnt=0
    def inner(*args,**kwargs):
        nonlocal cnt
        cnt+=1
        print('{0} has been called {1} times'.format(fn.__name__,cnt))
        return fn(*args,**kwargs)
    return inner

a=[1,2,3,4]
a_pop=counter(a.pop)

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