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Home/ Questions/Q 324149
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T09:05:50+00:00 2026-05-12T09:05:50+00:00

I’m actually trying doing this in Java, but I’m in the process of teaching

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I’m actually trying doing this in Java, but I’m in the process of teaching myself python and it made me wonder if there was an easy/clever way to do this with wrappers or something.

I want to know how many times a specific method was called inside another method. For example:

def foo(z):
    #do something
    return result

def bar(x,y):
    #complicated algorithm/logic involving foo
    return foobar

So for each call to bar with various parameters, I’d like to know how many times foo was called, perhaps with output like this:

>>> print bar('xyz',3)
foo was called 15 times
[results here]
>>> print bar('stuv',6)
foo was called 23 times
[other results here]

edit: I realize I could just slap a counter inside bar and dump it when I return, but it would be cool if there was some magic you could do with wrappers to accomplish the same thing. It would also mean I could reuse the same wrappers somewhere else without having to modify any code inside the method.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T09:05:51+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 9:05 am

    Sounds like almost the textbook example for decorators!

    def counted(fn):
        def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
            wrapper.called += 1
            return fn(*args, **kwargs)
        wrapper.called = 0
        wrapper.__name__ = fn.__name__
        return wrapper
    
    @counted
    def foo():
        return
    
    >>> foo()
    >>> foo.called
    1
    

    You could even use another decorator to automate the recording of how many times a function is called inside another function:

    def counting(other):
        def decorator(fn):
            def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
                other.called = 0
                try:
                    return fn(*args, **kwargs)
                finally:
                    print '%s was called %i times' % (other.__name__, other.called)
            wrapper.__name__ = fn.__name__
            return wrapper
        return decorator
    
    @counting(foo)
    def bar():
        foo()
        foo()
    
    >>> bar()
    foo was called 2 times
    

    If foo or bar can end up calling themselves, though, you’d need a more complicated solution involving stacks to cope with the recursion. Then you’re heading towards a full-on profiler…

    Possibly this wrapped decorator stuff, which tends to be used for magic, isn’t the ideal place to be looking if you’re still ‘teaching yourself Python’!

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