Say, I have a function defined as: def fun(arg_one, arg_two='x', arg_three=None): pass
Is there any way to get actual arguments that will be effectively used when I call this function in various ways, like: fun(5) => [5, 'x', None] fun(5, arg_three=['a', 'b']) => [5, 'x', ['a', 'b']] fun(5, 'something') => [5, 'something', None] (et caetera, using all possible mixes of positional, keyword and default arguments) I'd like to wrap function definition with a decorator that intercepts not only passed arguments, but also defaults that will be actually used in execution. If this sounds not feasible (or is simply impossible), I'll happily throw this idea and look for another one. ;) -- Jarek Zgoda Skype: jzgoda | GTalk: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | voice: +48228430101 "We read Knuth so you don't have to." (Tim Peters) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list