Caching class attributes in Python

mwolfe02 picture mwolfe02 · Oct 27, 2010 · Viewed 37.1k times · Source

I'm writing a class in python and I have an attribute that will take a relatively long time to compute, so I only want to do it once. Also, it will not be needed by every instance of the class, so I don't want to do it by default in __init__.

I'm new to Python, but not to programming. I can come up with a way to do this pretty easily, but I've found over and over again that the 'Pythonic' way of doing something is often much simpler than what I come up with using my experience in other languages.

Is there a 'right' way to do this in Python?

Answer

Maxime R. picture Maxime R. · Nov 14, 2013

Python ≥ 3.8 @property and @functools.lru_cache have been combined into @cached_property.

import functools
class MyClass:
    @functools.cached_property
    def foo(self):
        print("long calculation here")
        return 21 * 2

Python ≥ 3.2 < 3.8

You should use both @property and @functools.lru_cache decorators:

import functools
class MyClass:
    @property
    @functools.lru_cache()
    def foo(self):
        print("long calculation here")
        return 21 * 2

This answer has more detailed examples and also mentions a backport for previous Python versions.

Python < 3.2

The Python wiki has a cached property decorator (MIT licensed) that can be used like this:

import random
# the class containing the property must be a new-style class
class MyClass(object):
   # create property whose value is cached for ten minutes
   @cached_property(ttl=600)
   def randint(self):
       # will only be evaluated every 10 min. at maximum.
       return random.randint(0, 100)

Or any implementation mentioned in the others answers that fits your needs.
Or the above mentioned backport.