Question

I would like to know what is the python way of initializing a class member but only when accessing it, if accessed. I tried the code below and it is working but is there something simpler than that?

class MyClass(object):

    _MY_DATA = None

    @staticmethod
    def _retrieve_my_data():
        my_data = ...  # costly database call
        return my_data

    @classmethod
    def get_my_data(cls):
        if cls._MY_DATA is None:
            cls._MY_DATA = MyClass._retrieve_my_data()
        return cls._MY_DATA
Was it helpful?

Solution

You could use a @property on the metaclass instead:

class MyMetaClass(type):
    @property
    def my_data(cls):
        if getattr(cls, '_MY_DATA', None) is None:
            my_data = ...  # costly database call
            cls._MY_DATA = my_data
        return cls._MY_DATA


class MyClass(metaclass=MyMetaClass):
    # ...

This makes my_data an attribute on the class, so the expensive database call is postponed until you try to access MyClass.my_data. The result of the database call is cached by storing it in MyClass._MY_DATA, the call is only made once for the class.

For Python 2, use class MyClass(object): and add a __metaclass__ = MyMetaClass attribute in the class definition body to attach the metaclass.

Demo:

>>> class MyMetaClass(type):
...     @property
...     def my_data(cls):
...         if getattr(cls, '_MY_DATA', None) is None:
...             print("costly database call executing")
...             my_data = 'bar'
...             cls._MY_DATA = my_data
...         return cls._MY_DATA
... 
>>> class MyClass(metaclass=MyMetaClass):
...     pass
... 
>>> MyClass.my_data
costly database call executing
'bar'
>>> MyClass.my_data
'bar'

This works because a data descriptor like property is looked up on the parent type of an object; for classes that's type, and type can be extended by using metaclasses.

OTHER TIPS

This answer is for a typical instance attribute/method only, not for a class attribute/classmethod, or staticmethod.

For Python 3.8+, how about using the cached_property decorator? It memoizes.

from functools import cached_property

class MyClass:

    @cached_property
    def my_lazy_attr(self):
        print("Initializing and caching attribute, once per class instance.")
        return 7**7**8

For Python 3.2+, how about using both property and lru_cache decorators? The latter memoizes.

from functools import lru_cache

class MyClass:

    @property
    @lru_cache()
    def my_lazy_attr(self):
        print("Initializing and caching attribute, once per class instance.")
        return 7**7**8

Credit: answer by Maxime R.

Another approach to make the code cleaner is to write a wrapper function that does the desired logic:

def memoize(f):
    def wrapped(*args, **kwargs):
        if hasattr(wrapped, '_cached_val'):
            return wrapped._cached_val
        result = f(*args, **kwargs)
        wrapped._cached_val = result
        return result
    return wrapped

You can use it as follows:

@memoize
def expensive_function():
    print "Computing expensive function..."
    import time
    time.sleep(1)
    return 400

print expensive_function()
print expensive_function()
print expensive_function()

Which outputs:

Computing expensive function...
400
400
400

Now your classmethod would look as follows, for example:

class MyClass(object):
        @classmethod
        @memoize
        def retrieve_data(cls):
            print "Computing data"
            import time
            time.sleep(1) #costly DB call
            my_data = 40
            return my_data

print MyClass.retrieve_data()
print MyClass.retrieve_data()
print MyClass.retrieve_data()

Output:

Computing data
40
40
40

Note that this will cache just one value for any set of arguments to the function, so if you want to compute different values depending on input values, you'll have to make memoize a bit more complicated.

Consider the pip-installable Dickens package which is available for Python 3.5+. It has a descriptors package which provides the relevant cachedproperty and cachedclassproperty decorators, the usage of which is shown in the example below. It seems to work as expected.

from descriptors import cachedproperty, classproperty, cachedclassproperty

class MyClass:
    FOO = 'A'

    def __init__(self):
        self.bar = 'B'

    @cachedproperty
    def my_cached_instance_attr(self):
        print('Initializing and caching attribute, once per class instance.')
        return self.bar * 2

    @cachedclassproperty
    def my_cached_class_attr(cls):
        print('Initializing and caching attribute, once per class.')
        return cls.FOO * 3

    @classproperty
    def my_class_property(cls):
        print('Calculating attribute without caching.')
        return cls.FOO + 'C'

Ring gives lru_cache-like interface but working with any kind of descriptor supports: https://ring-cache.readthedocs.io/en/latest/quickstart.html#method-classmethod-staticmethod

class Page(object):
    (...)

    @ring.lru()
    @classmethod
    def class_content(cls):
        return cls.base_content

    @ring.lru()
    @staticmethod
    def example_dot_com():
        return requests.get('http://example.com').content

See the link for more details.

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