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Home/ Questions/Q 7852225
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 2, 20262026-06-02T19:22:14+00:00 2026-06-02T19:22:14+00:00

Just as a dynamic class can be created using type(name, base-classes, namespace-dict), can a

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Just as a dynamic class can be created using type(name, base-classes, namespace-dict), can a dynamic function be created?

I’ve tried doing something along the lines of:

>>> f = type("f", (function,), {})
NameError: name 'function' is not defined

Ok, so I’ll be clever, but:

>>> def fn():
...   pass
... 
>>> type(fn)
<type 'function'>
>>> f = type("f", (type(fn),), {})
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: type 'function' is not an acceptable base type

Does Python specifically prevent the creation of dynamic functions in the same way it allows dynamic classes?

Edit: Note, I’d disallow any use of exec.. Since my question is does the Python language itself permit this.

Thanks in advance.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-02T19:22:16+00:00Added an answer on June 2, 2026 at 7:22 pm

    There is types.FunctionType which you can use to dynamically create a function e.g.

    def test_func(): print 'wow' 
    dynf = types.FunctionType(test_func.func_code, {})
    dynf()
    

    Output:

    wow
    

    You might object that this is not dynamic because I am using code from another function, but that was just an example there is a way to generate code from python strings e.g.

    dynf = types.FunctionType(compile('print "really WoW"', 'dyn.py', 'exec'), {})
    dynf()
    

    Output:

    really WoW
    

    Now that is dynamic!

    OP is worried about the dynamic nature of such function so here is another example

    dynf = types.FunctionType(compile('test_func():\ntest_func()', 'dyn.py', 'exec'), globals())
    dynf()
    

    Output:

    wow
    wow
    

    Note:
    Creating Function object like this seems to have limitations e.g. it is not easy to pass arguments, because to pass arguments we need to pass correct co_argcount, co_varnames and other 12 variables to types.CodeType, which theoretically can be done but will be error prone, an easier way is to import string as a module and you have a full fledged function e.g.

    import types
    import sys,imp
    
    code = """def f(a,b,c):
        print a+b+c, "really WoW"
    """
    module = imp.new_module('myfunctions')
    exec code in module.__dict__
    module.f('W', 'o', 'W')
    

    Output:

    WoW really WoW
    
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