On Tue, Mar 27, 2012 at 7:26 AM, Gelonida N <gelon...@gmail.com> wrote: > One option I though of would be: > > def obsolete_func(func): > def call_old(*args, **kwargs): > print "func is old psl use new one" > return func(*args, **kwargs) > return call_old > > and > > def get_time(a='high'): > return a + 'noon'
That's a reasonable idea. Incorporate Dan's suggestion of using DeprecationWarning. You may want to try decorator syntax: def was(oldname): def _(func): globals()[oldname]=func return func return _ @was("get_thyme") def get_time(a='high'): return a + 'noon' That won't raise DeprecationWarning, though. It's a very simple assignment. The was() internal function could be enhanced to do a bit more work, but I'm not sure what version of Python you're using and what introspection facilities you have. But if you're happy with the old versions coming up with (*args,**kwargs) instead of their parameter lists, it's not difficult: def was(oldname): def _(func): def bounce(*args,**kwargs): # raise DeprecationWarning return func(*args,**kwargs) globals()[oldname]=bounce return func return _ I've never actually used the Python warnings module, but any line of code you fill in at the comment will be executed any time the old name is used. In any case, it's still used with the same convenient decorator. You could even unify multiple functions under a single new name: @was("foo") @was("bar") def quux(spam,ham): return ham.eat() Hope that helps! ChrisA -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list