Python Decorators
A Python Decorator provides a concise and reusable way for extending a function or a class.
Bare bone decorator
A decorator in its simplest form is a function that takes another function as an argument and returns a wrapper. The following example shows the creation of a decorator and its usage.
def your_decorator(func):
  def wrapper():
    # Do stuff before func...
    print("Before func!")
    func()
    # Do stuff after func...
    print("After func!")
  return wrapper
@your_decorator
def foo():
  print("Hello World!")
foo()
# Before func!
# Hello World!
# After func!
Decorator for a function with parameters
def your_decorator(func):
  def wrapper(*args,**kwargs):
    # Do stuff before func...
    print("Before func!") 
    func(*args,**kwargs)
    # Do stuff after func...
    print("After func!")
  return wrapper
@your_decorator
def foo(bar):
  print("My name is " + bar)
foo("Jack")
# Before func!
# My name is Jack
# After func!
Template for a basic decorator
This template is useful for most decorator use-cases. It is valid for functions with or without parameters, and with or without a return value.
import functools
def your_decorator(func):
  @functools.wraps(func) # For preserving the metadata of func.
  def wrapper(*args,**kwargs):
    # Do stuff before func...
    result = func(*args,**kwargs)
    # Do stuff after func..
    return result
  return wrapper
Decorator with parameters
You can also define parameters for the decorator to use.
import functools
def your_decorator(arg):
  def decorator(func):
    @functools.wraps(func) # For preserving the metadata of func.
    def wrapper(*args,**kwargs):
      # Do stuff before func possibly using arg...
      result = func(*args,**kwargs)
      # Do stuff after func possibly using arg...
      return result
    return wrapper
  return decorator
To use this decorator:
@your_decorator(arg = 'x')
def foo(bar):
  return bar
Class based decorators
A decorator can also be defined as a class instead of a method. This is useful for maintaining and updating a state, such as in the following example, where we count the number of calls made to a method:
class CountCallNumber:
  def __init__(self, func):
    self.func = func
    self.call_number = 0
  def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
    self.call_number += 1
    print("This is execution number " + str(self.call_number))
    return self.func(*args, **kwargs)
@CountCallNumber
def say_hi(name):
  print("Hi! My name is " + name)
say_hi("Jack")
# This is execution number 1
# Hi! My name is Jack
say_hi("James")
# This is execution number 2
# Hi! My name is James
Count Example
This count example is inspired by Patrick Loeber's YouTube tutorial.