def noop(*args):
pass
def debug(string):
print("##DEBUG >>> {0}".format(string))
debug=noop
def foo(...):
...
debug("blah blah " + repr(baz))
...
Debugging is then enabled by commenting out the debug=noop line, or disabled by uncommenting it.
The downside is that the repr() is executed whether or not debugging is enabled; so if they turn out to be large or expensive to calculate, they hurt performance in all cases.
In the car on the way to lunch today with a colleague, I was bemoaning this state of affairs and wishing python had some kind of macros. His suggested solution was to eval a string; my mildly better counterproposal was to use python's excuse for a closure:
def noop(*args):
pass
def debug(stringfunc):
for line in stringfunc():
print("##DEBUG >>> {0}".format(line))
debug=noop
def foo(...):
...
debug(lambda : "blah blah " + repr(baz))
...
This saves the evaluation of the repr() until the lambda is eval'd... which may be never. The more conventional way of doing this is:
DEBUG=false
def debug(string):
print("##DEBUG >>> {0}".format(string))
def foo(...):
...
if DEBUG: debug("blah blah" + repr(baz))
...
which always seemed much more... redundant, I guess... to me. Either one is a solution to the problem of extra debug overhead, however.
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