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Can anyone explain python's relative imports? [duplicate]

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python

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How do Python relative imports work?

Relative imports make use of dot notation to specify location. A single dot means that the module or package referenced is in the same directory as the current location. Two dots mean that it is in the parent directory of the current location—that is, the directory above.

Why are Python imports so complicated?

Imports are difficult because there are so many factors interacting with each other to make things work when they shouldn't, and make things fail/get a warning when they should not.

What are the three types of import statement in Python explain?

Good practice is to sort import modules in three groups - standard library imports, related third-party imports, and local imports.

How does Python find imports?

Step 2: If the module that needs to be imported is not found in the current directory. Then python will search it in the PYTHONPATH which is a list of directory names, with the same syntax as the shell variable PATH. To know the directories in PYTHONPATH we can simply get them by the sys module.


You are importing from package "sub". start.py is not itself in a package even if there is a __init__.py present.

You would need to start your program from one directory over parent.py:

./start.py

./pkg/__init__.py
./pkg/parent.py
./pkg/sub/__init__.py
./pkg/sub/relative.py

With start.py:

import pkg.sub.relative

Now pkg is the top level package and your relative import should work.


If you want to stick with your current layout you can just use import parent. Because you use start.py to launch your interpreter, the directory where start.py is located is in your python path. parent.py lives there as a separate module.

You can also safely delete the top level __init__.py, if you don't import anything into a script further up the directory tree.


If you are going to call relative.py directly and i.e. if you really want to import from a top level module you have to explicitly add it to the sys.path list.
Here is how it should work:

# Add this line to the beginning of relative.py file
import sys
sys.path.append('..')

# Now you can do imports from one directory top cause it is in the sys.path
import parent

# And even like this:
from parent import Parent

If you think the above can cause some kind of inconsistency you can use this instead:

sys.path.append(sys.path[0] + "/..")

sys.path[0] refers to the path that the entry point was ran from.


Checking it out in python3:

python -V
Python 3.6.5

Example1:

.
├── parent.py
├── start.py
└── sub
    └── relative.py

- start.py
import sub.relative

- parent.py
print('Hello from parent.py')

- sub/relative.py
from .. import parent

If we run it like this(just to make sure PYTHONPATH is empty):

PYTHONPATH='' python3 start.py

Output:

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "start.py", line 1, in <module>
    import sub.relative
  File "/python-import-examples/so-example-v1/sub/relative.py", line 1, in <module>
    from .. import parent
ValueError: attempted relative import beyond top-level package

If we change import in sub/relative.py

- sub/relative.py
import parent

If we run it like this:

PYTHONPATH='' python3 start.py

Output:

Hello from parent.py

Example2:

.
├── parent.py
└── sub
    ├── relative.py
    └── start.py

- parent.py
print('Hello from parent.py')

- sub/relative.py
print('Hello from relative.py')

- sub/start.py
import relative
from .. import parent

Run it like:

PYTHONPATH='' python3 sub/start.py

Output:

Hello from relative.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "sub/start.py", line 2, in <module>
    from .. import parent
ValueError: attempted relative import beyond top-level package

If we change import in sub/start.py:

- sub/start.py
import relative
import parent

Run it like:

PYTHONPATH='' python3 sub/start.py

Output:

Hello from relative.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "sub/start.py", line 3, in <module>
    import parent
ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'parent'

Run it like:

PYTHONPATH='.' python3 sub/start.py

Output:

Hello from relative.py
Hello from parent.py

Also it's better to use import from root folder, i.e.:

- sub/start.py
import sub.relative
import parent

Run it like:

PYTHONPATH='.' python3 sub/start.py

Output:

Hello from relative.py
Hello from parent.py