No, there are (more than) two ways to make callable objects. One is to def
a function, which is obviously callable. Another is to define a __call__
method in a class, which will make instances of it callable. And classes themselves are callable objects.
A decorator is nothing more than a callable object, which is intended to accept a function as its sole argument and return something callable. The following syntax:
@decorate
def some_function(...):
...
Is just a slightly nicer way of writing:
def some_function(...):
...
some_function = decorate(some_function)
The class-based example you give isn't a function that takes a function and return a function, which is the bog-standard vanilla decorator, it's a class that is initialised with a function whose instances are callable. To me, this is a little weird if you're not actually using it as a class (Does it have other methods? Does its state change? Do you make several instances of it that have common behaviour encapsulated by the class?). But normal use of your decorated function will not tell the difference (unless it's a particularly invasive decorator), so do whatever feels more natural to you.