Domanda

Im new to Python, and im building a wrapper for an api. I would want to let the user decide if he/she wants to use a decorator on methods I expose from my module.

For example:

# create a new instance
api = MyApi()

# return a simple json response with all the data related to a timetable
print api.time_table

Now the user has all the data, and can do whatever he/she wants. I would want to add some kind of 'convenience' methods, for example; to let the user get a small part of the json instead of the whole big json response.

My idea was to use pythons decorators for this. Optionally my goal whould be something like this:

# use the method and get al the data
print api.time_table

# Optionally, get a specific part, just the shows part. (PSEUDO CODE BELOW)
@shows
print api.time_table

Naturally, thats not how decorators work, but is there a way to optionally use a decorator on a existing class method, or does the decorator always have to be wrapping the original method?

So what is the most Pythonic way here? I really would like to use decorator, but if thats a bad idea here, im fine with just creating more 'convenience' methods inside my Api class.

È stato utile?

Soluzione

Your options are to add more methods to your API or to provide the user with utility functions instead:

from yourmodule import MyAPI

api = MyAPI

filtered_timetable = api.filter_on(something)

or

from yourmodule import MyAPI, filter_timetable

api = MyAPI

filtered_timetable = filter_timetable(api.time_table, something)

Remember that decorators are just callables; the syntax:

@foo
def bar():
    pass

is just syntactic sugar for:

def bar():
    pass
bar = foo(bar)

foo() is called, and the return value replaces the decorated object. Usually you use functions for decorators, but nothing says you have to use those functions only as decorators.

filter_timetable could be such a decorator; if you have a usecase for using it as both.

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