Issue
When a function is called, I would like to print the names and values of it's parameters. Something like:
>>> def foo(bar, baz):
>>> print_func_params()
>>>foo(5, 'test')
>>>bar=5, baz='test'
Right now I do it manually:
print(f"bar={bar},baz={baz}")
But this is a pain because as new parameters get added there's always the risk of missing something.
For context, this code is used for debugging a hardware interface. When the hardware isn't present it prints the IO instead of sending it to the hardware. This code lets me see the full sequence of commands that are being sent without needing the hardware present.
I found this answer which can work for single variables when you know what they are (and uses eval
). I'd really like to avoid eval
and be able to do it for an unknown set of parameters.
Solution
After you've add explanation how you want to apply this, I think best way will be to use decorator. It's more universal solution, because you can add it to any function in your code and it will print all debug info if debug mode is on.
Code:
from functools import wraps
DEBUG = True
def debug_log(function):
@wraps(function)
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
if DEBUG:
print(">> Called", function.__name__, "\n",
{**dict(zip(function.__code__.co_varnames, args)), **kwargs})
result = function(*args, **kwargs)
if DEBUG:
print(">>", function.__name__, "return:\n", result)
return result
return wrapper
@debug_log
def first_example(a, b, c):
return 100
@debug_log
def second_example(d, e, f):
return 200
first_example(10, 11, 12)
first_example(c=12, a=10, b=11)
second_example(13, 14, 15)
second_example(e=14, d=13, f=15)
DEBUG = False
first_example(0, 0, 0)
second_example(1, 1, 1)
Output:
>> Called first_example
{'a': 10, 'b': 11, 'c': 12}
>> first_example return:
100
>> Called first_example
{'c': 12, 'a': 10, 'b': 11}
>> first_example return:
100
>> Called second_example
{'d': 13, 'e': 14, 'f': 15}
>> second_example return:
200
>> Called second_example
{'e': 14, 'd': 13, 'f': 15}
>> second_example return:
200
Answered By - Olvin Roght
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.