So, decorators are neat (maybe check out a new tutorial on them). Descriptors are neat but may seem hard (though they hardly take a long time to describe). Sometimes these two things intersect, and this post describes how.

Here’s an example decorator where this comes up. First, we want something that looks like a WSGI application:

def application(environ, start_response): start_response('200 OK', [('content-type', 'text/html')]) return ['hi!']

But we want to use WebOb, like:

from webob import Request, Response def application(environ, start_response): req = Request(environ) resp = Response('hi!') return resp(environ, start_response)

(We don’t use req in this example, but of course you probably would in a real WSGI application)

Now req = Request(environ) is boilerplate, and it’d be nicer to just do return resp instead of return resp(environ, start_response) . So let’s make a decorator to do that:

class wsgiapp(object): def __init__(self, func): self.func = func def __call__(self, environ, start_response): resp = self.func(Request(environ)) return resp(environ, start_response) @wsgiapp def application(req): return Response('hi!')

If you don’t understand what happened there, go read up on decorators. Now, what if you want to decorate a method? For instance:

class Application(object): def __init__(self, text): self.text = text @wsgiapp def __call__(self, req): return Response(self.text) application = Application('hi!')

This won’t quite work, because @wsgiapp will call Application.__call__(req) — with no self argument. This is generally a problem with any decorator that changes the signature, because the signature for methods has this extra self argument. Descriptors can handle this. First we’ll have the same wsgiapp definition as we had before, but we’ll add the magic descriptor method __get__ :

class wsgiapp(object): def __init__(self, func): self.func = func def __call__(self, environ, start_response): resp = self.func(Request(environ)) return resp(environ, start_response) def __get__(self, obj, type=None): if obj is None: return self new_func = self.func.__get__(obj, type) return self.__class__(new_func)

So, to explain:

When you get an attribute from an instance, like Application().__call__ , Python will check if the object that was fetched has a __get__ method. If it does, it will call that method and use the result of that method.

This part:

if obj is None: return self

is what happens when you do Application.__call__ — in other words, when get a class attribute. In that case obj (self) will be None, and it will just return the descriptor (it could do something else, like in this example, but usually it doesn’t).

Functions already have a __get__ method. You can try it yourself:

>>> def example(*args): ... print 'got', args >>> example_bound = example.__get__(1) >>> example_bound('test') got (1, 'test')