Possible Duplicate:
Dynamic module import in Python
I intend to make a suite of files at some point soon, and the best way to organize it is to have a list, that list will be at the very top of a file, and after it will come a ridiculous amount of code to handle what that list controls and how it operates. I'm looking to write said list only once, and said list is a list of folder and file names in this format:
[(folder/filename, bool, bool, int), (folder/filename, bool, bool, int)] As you can see, folder/filename are the same (sort of). File name is folder name with .py on the end, but doing import XXX you don't need to do import XXX.py, so I don't see this causing an issue.
The problem I'm facing is importing using this method...
for (testName, auto, hardware, bit) in testList: print(testName) paths = "\\" + testName print paths addpath(paths) sys.modules[testName] = testName # One of a few options I've seen suggested on the net print("Path Added") test = testName + ".Helloworld()" eval(test) So for each test I have, print the name, assemble a string which contains the path ("\\testName"), for this example, print the test path, then add the path to the list (sys.path.append(path)), then print to confirm it happened, then assemble a string which will be executed by eval for the tests main module and eventually eval it.
As you can see, I'm currently having to have a list of imports at the top. I can't simply do import testName (the contents of testName are the name of the module I wish to import), as it will try to find a module called testName, not a module called the contents of testName.
I've seen a few examples of where this has been done, but can't find any which work in my circumstances. If someone could literally throw a chunk of code which does it that would be wonderful.
I'd also request that I'm not hung, drawn, nor quartered for use of eval, it is used in a very controlled environment (the list through which it cycles is within the .py file, so no "end user" should mess with it).
__import__() Parameters name - the name of the module you want to import. globals and locals - determines how to interpret name. fromlist - objects or submodules that should be imported by name. level - specifies whether to use absolute or relative imports.
Dynamically Loading Modules or Classes Using the imp module: Modules can be imported dynamically by the imp module in python. The example below is a demonstration on the using the imp module. It provides the find_module() method to find the module and the import_module() method to import it. Dynamic_import.py.
Javascript import statement is used to import bindings that are exported by another module. Using import, the code is easier to manage when it is small and bite-size chunks. This is the thinking behind keeping functions to only one task or having files contain only a few or one component at a time.
Not sure if I understood everything correctly, but you can import a module dynamically using __import__:
mod = __import__(testName) mod.HelloWorld() Edit: I wasn't aware that the use of __import__ was discouraged by the python docs for user code: __import__ documentation (as noted by Bakuriu)
This should also work and would be considered better style:
import importlib mod = importlib.import_module(testName) mod.HelloWorld()
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