Modules - Python 3.10.1 Documentation
Modules - Python 3.10.1 Documentation
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6. Modules
If you quit from the Python interpreter and enter it again, the definitions you
have made (functions and variables) are lost.
Therefore, if you want to write a
somewhat longer program, you are better off using a text editor to prepare the
input for the
interpreter and running it with that file as input instead. This
is known as creating a script. As your program gets longer, you
may want to
split it into several files for easier maintenance. You may also want to use a
handy function that you’ve written
in several programs without copying its
definition into each program.
To support this, Python has a way to put definitions in a file and use them in a
script or in an interactive instance of the
interpreter. Such a file is called a
module; definitions from a module can be imported into other modules or into
the main
module (the collection of variables that you have access to in a
script executed at the top level and in calculator mode).
A module is a file containing Python definitions and statements. The file name
is the module name with the suffix .py
appended. Within a module, the
module’s name (as a string) is available as the value of the global variable
__name__ . For
instance, use your favorite text editor to create a file
called fibo.py in the current directory with the following contents:
a, b = 0, 1
while a < n:
a, b = b, a+b
print()
result = []
a, b = 0, 1
while a < n:
result.append(a)
a, b = b, a+b
return result
Now enter the Python interpreter and import this module with the following
command:
This does not enter the names of the functions defined in fibo directly in
the current symbol table; it only enters the
module name fibo there. Using
the module name you can access the functions:
>>> fibo.fib(1000)
>>>
0 1 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 34 55 89 144 233 377 610 987
>>> fibo.fib2(100)
>>> fibo.__name__
'fibo'
If you intend to use a function often you can assign it to a local name:
Modules can import other modules. It is customary but not required to place all
import statements at the beginning of a
module (or script, for that
matter). The imported module names are placed in the importing module’s global
symbol table.
This does not introduce the module name from which the imports are taken in the
local symbol table (so in the example,
fibo is not defined).
This is effectively importing the module in the same way that import fibo
will do, with the only difference of it being
available as fib .
Note:
For efficiency reasons, each module is only imported once per interpreter
session. Therefore, if you change your
modules, you must restart the
interpreter – or, if it’s just one module you want to test interactively,
use
importlib.reload() , e.g. import importlib;
importlib.reload(modulename) .
the code in the module will be executed, just as if you imported it, but with
the __name__ set to "__main__" . That means
that by adding this code at
the end of your module:
if __name__ == "__main__":
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import sys
fib(int(sys.argv[1]))
you can make the file usable as a script as well as an importable module,
because the code that parses the command line
only runs if the module is
executed as the “main” file:
$ python fibo.py 50
0 1 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 34
When a module named spam is imported, the interpreter first searches for
a built-in module with that name. If not found, it
then searches for a file
named spam.py in a list of directories given by the variable
sys.path . sys.path is initialized from
these locations:
The directory containing the input script (or the current directory when no
file is specified).
PYTHONPATH (a list of directory names, with the same syntax as the
shell variable PATH ).
The installation-dependent default (by convention including a
site-packages directory, handled by the site module).
Note:
On file systems which support symlinks, the directory containing the input
script is calculated after the symlink is
followed. In other words the
directory containing the symlink is not added to the module search path.
To speed up loading modules, Python caches the compiled version of each module
in the __pycache__ directory under the
name module.version.pyc ,
where the version encodes the format of the compiled file; it generally contains
the Python
version number. For example, in CPython release 3.3 the compiled
version of spam.py would be cached as
__pycache__/spam.cpython-33.pyc . This
naming convention allows compiled modules from different releases and
different
versions of Python to coexist.
Python checks the modification date of the source against the compiled version
to see if it’s out of date and needs to be
recompiled. This is a completely
automatic process. Also, the compiled modules are platform-independent, so the
same
library can be shared among systems with different architectures.
Python does not check the cache in two circumstances. First, it always
recompiles and does not store the result for the
module that’s loaded directly
from the command line. Second, it does not check the cache if there is no
source module. To
support a non-source (compiled only) distribution, the
compiled module must be in the source directory, and there must not
be a source
module.
'>>> '
>>> sys.ps2
'... '
C> print('Yuck!')
Yuck!
C>
These two variables are only defined if the interpreter is in interactive mode.
>>> dir(sys)
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'warnoptions']
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Without arguments, dir() lists the names you have defined currently:
>>> a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
>>>
>>> import fibo
>>> dir()
Note that it lists all types of names: variables, modules, functions, etc.
dir() does not list the names of built-in functions and variables. If you
want a list of those, they are defined in the
standard module
builtins :
'zip']
6.4. Packages
Packages are a way of structuring Python’s module namespace by using “dotted
module names”. For example, the module
name A.B designates a submodule
named B in a package named A . Just like the use of modules saves the
authors of
different modules from having to worry about each other’s global
variable names, the use of dotted module names saves
the authors of multi-module
packages like NumPy or Pillow from having to worry about
each other’s module names.
Suppose you want to design a collection of modules (a “package”) for the uniform
handling of sound files and sound data.
There are many different sound file
formats (usually recognized by their extension, for example: .wav ,
.aiff , .au ), so you
may need to create and maintain a growing
collection of modules for the conversion between the various file formats.
There are also many different operations you might want to perform on sound data
(such as mixing, adding echo, applying
an equalizer function, creating an
artificial stereo effect), so in addition you will be writing a never-ending
stream of
modules to perform these operations. Here’s a possible structure for
your package (expressed in terms of a hierarchical
filesystem):
sound/ Top-level package
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__init__.py Initialize the sound package
__init__.py
wavread.py
wavwrite.py
aiffread.py
aiffwrite.py
auread.py
auwrite.py
...
__init__.py
echo.py
surround.py
reverse.py
...
__init__.py
equalizer.py
vocoder.py
karaoke.py
...
Users of the package can import individual modules from the package, for
example:
import sound.effects.echo
This also loads the submodule echo , and makes it available without its
package prefix, so it can be used as follows:
Again, this loads the submodule echo , but this makes its function
echofilter() directly available:
Note that when using from package import item , the item can be either a
submodule (or subpackage) of the package,
or some other name defined in the
package, like a function, class or variable. The import statement first
tests whether the
item is defined in the package; if not, it assumes it is a
module and attempts to load it. If it fails to find it, an ImportError
exception is raised.
Contrarily, when using syntax like import item.subitem.subsubitem , each item
except for the last must be a package;
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the last item can be a module or a
package but can’t be a class or function or variable defined in the previous
item.
Now what happens when the user writes from sound.effects import * ? Ideally,
one would hope that this somehow
goes out to the filesystem, finds which
submodules are present in the package, and imports them all. This could take a
long time and importing sub-modules might have unwanted side-effects that should
only happen when the sub-module is
explicitly imported.
The only solution is for the package author to provide an explicit index of the
package. The import statement uses the
following convention: if a package’s
__init__.py code defines a list named __all__ , it is taken to be the
list of module
names that should be imported when from package import * is
encountered. It is up to the package author to keep this
list up-to-date when a
new version of the package is released. Package authors may also decide not to
support it, if they
don’t see a use for importing * from their package. For
example, the file sound/effects/__init__.py could contain the
following
code:
This would mean that from sound.effects import * would import the three
named submodules of the sound package.
import sound.effects.echo
import sound.effects.surround
In this example, the echo and surround modules are imported in the
current namespace because they are defined in the
sound.effects package
when the from...import statement is executed. (This also works when
__all__ is defined.)
Although certain modules are designed to export only names that follow certain
patterns when you use import * , it is still
considered bad practice in
production code.
When packages are structured into subpackages (as with the sound package
in the example), you can use absolute
imports to refer to submodules of siblings
packages. For example, if the module sound.filters.vocoder needs to use
the echo module in the sound.effects package, it can use from
sound.effects import echo .
You can also write relative imports, with the from module import name form
of import statement. These imports use
leading dots to indicate the current and
parent packages involved in the relative import. From the surround
module for
example, you might use:
Note that relative imports are based on the name of the current module. Since
the name of the main module is always
"__main__" , modules intended for use
as the main module of a Python application must always use absolute imports.
While this feature is not often needed, it can be used to extend the set of
modules found in a package.
Footnotes
[1] In fact function definitions are also ‘statements’ that are ‘executed’; the
execution of a module-level function definition
enters the function name in
the module’s global symbol table.