Is there a way to combine two decorators into one new decorator in python?
I realize I can just apply multiple decorators to a function, but I was curious as to whether there's some simple way to combine two into a new one.
Is there a way to combine two decorators into one new decorator in python?
I realize I can just apply multiple decorators to a function, but I was curious as to whether there's some simple way to combine two into a new one.
A bit more general:
def composed(*decs):
def deco(f):
for dec in reversed(decs):
f = dec(f)
return f
return deco
Then
@composed(dec1, dec2)
def some(f):
pass
is equivalent to
@dec1
@dec2
def some(f):
pass
return lambda x: reduce(lambda y, f: f(y), decs, x)
... well, after typing this I see the advantage of your code :)
Commented
Mar 23, 2011 at 18:13
@new_decorator = composed(dec1(some_params), dec2)
Which I'm using to have the decorator logic in one place (it's for user authorisation of a django view). Your code will be a useful addition to the toolbox. Cheers.
dec2
then dec1
, i.e. dec1(dec2(some(f)))
. dec2
gets executed first.
Commented
Nov 24, 2020 at 12:14
Yes. See the definition of a decorator, here.
Something like this should work:
def multiple_decorators(func):
return decorator1(decorator2(func))
@multiple_decorators
def foo(): pass
Decorators are just functions that take a function as input and return a new function. This:
@deco
def foo():
...
Is equivalent to this:
def foo():
...
foo = deco(foo)
In other words, the decorated function (foo
) is passed as an argument to the decorator, and then foo
is replaced with the return value of the decorator. Equipped with this knowledge, it's easy to write a decorator that combines two other decorators:
def merged_decorator(func):
return decorator2(decorator1(func))
# now both of these function definitions are equivalent:
@decorator2
@decorator1
def foo():
...
@merged_decorator
def foo():
...
It gets a little trickier if the decorators accept arguments, like these two:
@deco_with_args2(bar='bar')
@deco_with_args1('baz')
def foo():
...
You might wonder how these decorators are even implemented. It's actually pretty simple: deco_with_args1
and deco_with_args2
are functions that return another function decorator. Decorators with arguments are essentially decorator factories. The equivalent of this:
@deco_with_args('baz')
def foo():
...
Is this:
def foo():
...
real_decorator = deco_with_args('baz')
foo = real_decorator(foo)
In order to make a decorator that accepts arguments and then applies two other decorators, we have to implement our own decorator factory:
def merged_decorator_with_args(bar, baz):
# pass the arguments to the decorator factories and
# obtain the actual decorators
deco2 = deco_with_args2(bar=bar)
deco1 = deco_with_args1(baz)
# create a function decorator that applies the two
# decorators we just created
def real_decorator(func):
return deco2(deco1(func))
return real_decorator
This decorator can then be used like this:
@merged_decorator_with_args('bar', 'baz')
def foo():
...
If you don't want to repeat yourself too much in a test suite, you could do like this::
def apply_patches(func):
@functools.wraps(func)
@mock.patch('foo.settings.USE_FAKE_CONNECTION', False)
@mock.patch('foo.settings.DATABASE_URI', 'li://foo')
@mock.patch('foo.connection.api.Session.post', autospec=True)
def _(*args, **kwargs):
return func(*args, **kwargs)
return _
now you can use that in your test suite instead of a crazy amount of decorators above each function::
def ChuckNorrisCase(unittest.TestCase):
@apply_patches
def test_chuck_pwns_none(self):
self.assertTrue(None)
If the decorators don't take additional arguments, you could use
def compose(f, g):
return lambda x: f(g(x))
combined_decorator = compose(decorator1, decorator2)
Now
@combined_decorator
def f():
pass
will be equivalent to
@decorator1
@decorator2
def f():
pass
And to extend @Jochen's answer:
import click
def composed(*decs):
def deco(f):
for dec in reversed(decs):
f = dec(f)
return f
return deco
def click_multi(func):
return composed(
click.option('--xxx', is_flag=True, help='Some X help'),
click.option('--zzz', is_flag=True, help='Some Z help')
)(func)
@click_multi
def some_command(**args):
pass
In this example you can compose a new decorator that contains multiple decorators.
click_multi = composed(click.option('--xxx', is_flag=True, help='Some X help'),click.option('--zzz', is_flag=True, help='Some Z help'))
Commented
Nov 10, 2022 at 9:45
Python 3.9 we can use lambda expression as decorator. Combine using lambdas in a single line
example:
@lambda func: (lambda func: (lambda *variable: func(*variable).upper())) (lambda *variable: func(*variable) + ' World')
def say():
return "Hello"
print(say())
The above function has two decorators.
(lambda *variable: func(*variable) + ' World')
-- this decoration concatenates " World".
lambda *variable: func(*variable).upper()
-- this decoration converts to upper case.