I'm trying to write a python class which uses a decorator function that needs information of the instance state. This is working as intended, but if I explicitly make the decorator a staticmetod, I get the following error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "tford.py", line 1, in <module>
class TFord(object):
File "tford.py", line 14, in TFord
@ensure_black
TypeError: 'staticmethod' object is not callable
Why?
Here is the code:
class TFord(object):
def __init__(self, color):
self.color = color
@staticmethod
def ensure_black(func):
def _aux(self, *args, **kwargs):
if self.color == 'black':
return func(*args, **kwargs)
else:
return None
return _aux
@ensure_black
def get():
return 'Here is your shiny new T-Ford'
if __name__ == '__main__':
ford_red = TFord('red')
ford_black = TFord('black')
print ford_red.get()
print ford_black.get()
And if I just remove the line @staticmethod
, everything works, but I do not understand why. Shouldn't it need self
as a first argument?
@staticmethod
? It seems clear that you don't understand what that means. Static methods are not bound to an instance of an object, so they have noself
argument (and no access to instance variables).ensure_black
doesn't need an access toself
. It only needs to accessfunc
.def get()
also wasn't usingself
, so was confused as to how_aux
could be.