In Python there are three things that can be considered being name of the function:

The original name of the code block

It’s stored in the f.__code__.co_name (where f is the function object). If you use def orig_name to create function, orig_name is that name. For lambas it's <lambda> .

This attribute is readonly and can’t be changed. So the only way to create function with the custom name in runtime I’m aware of is exec :

(There is also more low-level way to do this that.)

The immutability of co_name actually makes sense: with that you can be sure that the name you see in the debugger (or just stack trace) is exactly the same you see in the source code (along with the filename and line number).

The __name__ attribute of the function object

It’s also aliased to func_name .

You can modify it ( orig_name.__name__ = 'updated name' ) and you surely do on a daily basis: @functools.wraps copies the __name__ of the decorated function to the new one.

__name__ is used by tools like pydoc , that's why you need @functools.wraps : so you don't see the technical details of every decorator in your documentation. Look at the example:

Here is the pydoc output:

FUNCTIONS

decorator1(f) decorator2(f) test1 = decorated(*args, **kwargs) test2(*args, **kwargs)

With wraps there is no sign of decorated in the documentation.

Name of the reference

One more thing that can be called function name (though it hardly is) is the name of a variable or an attribute where reference to that function is stored.

If you create function with def name , the name attribute will be added to the current scope. lambda , on the other hand, just returns a new value (which also can be assigned to attribute or variable: name = lambda: None `).

Obviously you can create more than one reference to the same function and all that references can have different names.