Question about import
Frank Millman
frank at chagford.com
Fri Sep 11 02:40:24 EDT 2015
"Ian Kelly" wrote in message
news:CALwzidm3khNaGTt0OhVEo5bhqk1tFEjBUUUinW9TNUxrpnr8cw at mail.gmail.com...
On Thu, Sep 10, 2015 at 1:12 AM, Frank Millman <frank at chagford.com> wrote:
> > That makes me wonder if, in my project, I can import all modules inside
> > 'start.py', and then just use 'import package_name' inside each module?
>
> You can, but for readability and reuse I think it's better to be
> explicit in each module and import the fully qualified module names
> that are needed, rather than relying on some other module to import
> them for you.
I don't disagree. However, I started this exercise because I found a
situation in one of my modules where I was referring to another module
without ever importing it, and it worked! It took me quite a while to track
down what was happening. So there could be a case for being explicit in the
other direction - import all modules up front, and explicitly state that all
modules are now free to reference anything in any other module. I will give
it more thought.
> > Another question - I thought that, because aa.py and bb.py are in
> > different
> > sub-directories, I would have to set them up as packages by adding
> > '__init__.py' to each one, but it works fine without that. What am I
> > missing?
> That surprises me also, but I suspect it's because they're
> subdirectories of the current working directory rather than packages
> found on the sys.path.
I had a look at PEP 420, as mentioned by Peter. I did not understand much of
it, but it did say that omitting __init__.py incurs an additional overhead,
so I will stick with including it.
Many thanks for the useful input.
Frank
More information about the Python-list
mailing list