I have a python function and a decorator that works just fine and it looks like this:
***SOLVED***
I was able to figure it out after reading some other forums. I wrote a "fun_cache" function accepting a cache argument.
def fun_cache(function):   memo = {}   def wrapper(*args):     if args in memo:       return memo[args]     else:       rv = function(*args)       memo[args] = rv       return rv   return wrapper @fun_cache def fib(n):   if (n < 2): return 1   else: return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2) assert(fib(0) == 1) assert(fib(3) == 3) assert(fib(6) == 13) assert(fib(10) == 89) assert(fib(30) == 1346269) assert(fib(100) == 573147844013817084101) assert(fib(400) == 284812298108489611757988937681460995615380088782304890986477195645969271404032323901)Now I will like to call the @fun_cache decorator like this :
@fun_cache(memo={}) def fib(n): Â Â if (n < 2): return 1 Â Â else: return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2)Any help?
***SOLVED***
I was able to figure it out after reading some other forums. I wrote a "fun_cache" function accepting a cache argument.