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Decko

:dash: The 3 most useful ES7 decorators: bind, debounce and memoize

From developit·Updated May 1, 2026·View on GitHub·

A concise implementation of the three most useful [decorators](https://github.com/wycats/javascript-decorators): The project is written primarily in JavaScript, distributed under the MIT License license, first published in 2015. It has gained significant community traction with 1,037 stars and 34 forks on GitHub. Key topics include: debounce, decorators, memoization, memoize, throttle-calls.

Latest release: 1.2.0
February 27, 2017View Changelog →

decko NPM Version Build Status

A concise implementation of the three most useful decorators:

  • @bind: make the value of this constant within a method
  • @debounce: throttle calls to a method
  • @memoize: cache return values based on arguments

Decorators help simplify code by replacing the noise of common patterns with declarative annotations.
Conversely, decorators can also be overused and create obscurity.
Decko establishes 3 standard decorators that are immediately recognizable, so you can avoid creating decorators in your own codebase.

💡 Tip: decko is particularly well-suited to Preact Classful Components.

💫 Note:

Installation

Available on npm:

sh
npm i -S decko

Usage

Each decorator method is available as a named import.

js
import { bind, memoize, debounce } from 'decko';

@bind

js
class Example { @bind foo() { // the value of `this` is always the object from which foo() was referenced. return this; } } let e = new Example(); assert.equal(e.foo.call(null), e);

@memoize

Cache values returned from the decorated function.
Uses the first argument as a cache key.
Cache keys are always converted to strings.

Options:

caseSensitive: false - Makes cache keys case-insensitive

cache: {} - Presupply cache storage, for seeding or sharing entries

js
class Example { @memoize expensive(key) { let start = Date.now(); while (Date.now()-start < 500) key++; return key; } } let e = new Example(); // this takes 500ms let one = e.expensive(1); // this takes 0ms let two = e.expensive(1); // this takes 500ms let three = e.expensive(2);

@debounce

Throttle calls to the decorated function. To debounce means "call this at most once per N ms".
All outward function calls get collated into a single inward call, and only the latest (most recent) arguments as passed on to the debounced function.

Options:

delay: 0 - The number of milliseconds to buffer calls for.

js
class Example { @debounce foo() { return this; } } let e = new Example(); // this will only call foo() once: for (let i=1000; i--) e.foo();

License

MIT

Contributors

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This article is auto-generated from developit/decko via the GitHub API.Last fetched: 6/23/2026