Python does not add the current directory to sys.path
, but rather the directory that the script is in. Add /home/bodacydo/work/project
to either sys.path
or $PYTHONPATH
.
Do you have a file called __init__.py
in the foo directory? If not then python won't recognise foo as a python package.
See the section on packages in the python tutorial for more information.
A better fix than setting PYTHONPATH
is to use python -m module.path
This will correctly set sys.path[0]
and is a more reliable way to execute modules.
I have a quick writeup about this problem, as other answerers have mentioned the reason for this is python path/to/file.py
puts path/to
on the beginning of the PYTHONPATH
(sys.path
).
Here is a step-by-step solution:
Add a script called run.py
in /home/bodacydo/work/project
and edit it like this:
import programs.my_python_program programs.my_python_program.main()
(replace main()
with your equivalent method in my_python_program
.)
/home/bodacydo/work/project
run.py
Explanation:
Since python appends to PYTHONPATH the path of the script from which it runs, running run.py
will append /home/bodacydo/work/project
. And voilà, import foo.tasks
will be found.
Example solution for adding the library to your PYTHONPATH.
Add the following line into your ~/.bashrc or just run it directly:
export PYTHONPATH="$PYTHONPATH:$HOME/.python"
Then link your required library into your ~/.python folder, e.g.
ln -s /home/user/work/project/foo ~/.python/
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