Stef Mientki <stef.mien...@gmail.com> writes: > I would like to know if a class definition has a decorator,
I'm not sure what this question means. Applying a decorator to a class definition produces a normal class. Classes don't “have” decorators; classes can be returned by a decorator function, but AFAIK the resulting class doesn't “have” the decorator in any sense. > is that possible ? The return value of a decorator isn't special in any way, AFAIK. Any function can return a class object or a function object, and any function can be used as a decorator. The only thing that makes a function a decorator is how it is used in the code; but it doesn't leave a trace that I know of. Now, what is it you're trying to do? Perhaps there's a better solution we can come up with. -- \ “Pinky, are you pondering what I'm pondering?” “I think so, | `\ Brain, but there's still a bug stuck in here from last time.” | _o__) —_Pinky and The Brain_ | Ben Finney -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list