My goal: pass a reference to a function, and be able to update the function later on.
In Python, I believe functions are passed by reference, but a function's reference is considered immutable. Thus, the function can't be updated later on.
This question gets at the core problem: Python functions call by reference
The answers all point at the workaround: pass the function within a mutable type such as a list
or a dict
.
I am wondering: is there a more direct way? Might there be some functools
function, types
utility, or external library that enables this behavior?
Sample Code
**Update**: I am not interested in making foo._on_call
public. I am trying to change on_call
externally via a reference, not by actually operating directly on the foo
object.
from typing import Callable, List
class Foo:
def __init__(self, on_call: Callable[[], int]):
self._on_call = on_call
def __call__(self) -> int:
return self._on_call()
def do_something() -> int:
return 0
def do_something_else() -> int:
return 1
foo = Foo(do_something)
do_something = do_something_else # Updating do_something
print(do_something()) # This prints 1 now
print(foo()) # This still prints 0, I want this to print 1 now too
Known (undesirable) workarounds:
- Pass
do_something
within a list - Recreate the
foo
object - Making
Foo
's_on_call
attribute public or using aproperty
decorator
Python version: 3.8
foo._on_call = do_something_else