views:

52

answers:

1

I thought that doing

@f
def g():
   print 'hello'

is exactly the same as

def g():
   print 'hello'
g=f(g)

But, I had this code, that uses contextlib.contextmanager:

@contextlib.contextmanager
def f():
    print 1
    yield
    print 2
with f:
    print 3

which works and yields 1 3 2

And when I tried to change it into

def f():
    print 1
    yield
    print 2
f=contextlib.contextmanager(f)
with f:
    print 3

I get AttributeError: 'function' object has no attribute '__exit__'

What am I missing? is there some black magic specifically in contextlib.contextmanager, or do i misunderstand how decorators work in general?

+3  A: 

Yes, decorator is exactly same as calling a function and assigning to returned value

In this case error comes because you are not calling function, so correct code would be

def f():
    print 1
    yield
    print 2

f=contextlib.contextmanager(f)
with f():
    print 3

also I am not sure if you tested code, because decorator code you have given will fail due to same reason

@contextlib.contextmanager
def f():
    print 1
    yield
    print 2
with f:
    print 3

Error:

    with f:
AttributeError: 'function' object has no attribute '__exit__'
Anurag Uniyal
thanks! a momentary lapse of reason :)
noam