Re: [Python-Dev] Class decorators
At 11:04 AM 3/28/2006 -0800, Guido van Rossum wrote:
That's fine. But there's also the C#/Java POV.
Can someone point me to examples of C# class "attributes" and Java annotations that they'd like to use with this mechanism? I would indeed like to see how those use cases compare with mine.
I'm somehow concerned that any mechanism that puts the syntax inside the class body is somehow going to have a hackish implementation,
That depends on whether there's syntax support, or it's just something that happens at runtime. I'm not opposed to having syntax, I just don't think that putting the syntax outside the class is the best thing for most of my class decorator use cases. Nonetheless, neither special syntax nor hackiness is really required. For example, your proposal here: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2004-April/043913.html was to use a '__decorators__' attribute, which would then be processed by a metaclass. However, this could simply become a standard magic attribute ala __metaclass__, and be processed by the class creation machinery after first invoking the correct metaclass. I don't really *like* that approach, but it requires neither syntax nor hacks, (nor a custom metaclass) and it could be syntax-sugared later. For that matter, if this __decorators__ machinery existed, the existing advisor implementation could become a lot less hacky. The only magical bit at that point would be doing something like: locals = sys._getframe(n).f_locals. locals.setdefault('__decorators__',[]).append(decorator) And this of course could go in a function in the stdlib, rather than have everybody writing their own _getframe() hacks.
participants (1)
-
Phillip J. Eby