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Visibility of global variables in imported modules

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How do I share global variables across modules?

We can create a config file & store the entire global variable to be shared across modules or script in it. By simply importing config, the entire global variable defined it will be available for use in other modules.

Do global variables get imported Python?

Globals in Python are global to a module, not across all modules. (Unlike C, where a global is the same across all implementation files unless you explicitly make it static.). If you need truly global variables from imported modules, you can set those at an attribute of the module where you're importing it.

Are global variables shared between modules?

Can I have a shared global variable across different files? As we discussed, the global variable is unique to its own module.

How do I use a global variable in another Python file?

To use global variables between files in Python, we can use the global keyword to define a global variable in a module file. Then we can import the module in another module and reference the global variable directly. We import the settings and subfile modules in main.py . Then we call settings.


Globals in Python are global to a module, not across all modules. (Many people are confused by this, because in, say, C, a global is the same across all implementation files unless you explicitly make it static.)

There are different ways to solve this, depending on your actual use case.


Before even going down this path, ask yourself whether this really needs to be global. Maybe you really want a class, with f as an instance method, rather than just a free function? Then you could do something like this:

import module1
thingy1 = module1.Thingy(a=3)
thingy1.f()

If you really do want a global, but it's just there to be used by module1, set it in that module.

import module1
module1.a=3
module1.f()

On the other hand, if a is shared by a whole lot of modules, put it somewhere else, and have everyone import it:

import shared_stuff
import module1
shared_stuff.a = 3
module1.f()

… and, in module1.py:

import shared_stuff
def f():
    print shared_stuff.a

Don't use a from import unless the variable is intended to be a constant. from shared_stuff import a would create a new a variable initialized to whatever shared_stuff.a referred to at the time of the import, and this new a variable would not be affected by assignments to shared_stuff.a.


Or, in the rare case that you really do need it to be truly global everywhere, like a builtin, add it to the builtin module. The exact details differ between Python 2.x and 3.x. In 3.x, it works like this:

import builtins
import module1
builtins.a = 3
module1.f()

As a workaround, you could consider setting environment variables in the outer layer, like this.

main.py:

import os
os.environ['MYVAL'] = str(myintvariable)

mymodule.py:

import os

myval = None
if 'MYVAL' in os.environ:
    myval = os.environ['MYVAL']

As an extra precaution, handle the case when MYVAL is not defined inside the module.


A function uses the globals of the module it's defined in. Instead of setting a = 3, for example, you should be setting module1.a = 3. So, if you want cur available as a global in utilities_module, set utilities_module.cur.

A better solution: don't use globals. Pass the variables you need into the functions that need it, or create a class to bundle all the data together, and pass it when initializing the instance.


This post is just an observation for Python behaviour I encountered. Maybe the advices you read above don't work for you if you made the same thing I did below.

Namely, I have a module which contains global/shared variables (as suggested above):

#sharedstuff.py

globaltimes_randomnode=[]
globalist_randomnode=[]

Then I had the main module which imports the shared stuff with:

import sharedstuff as shared

and some other modules that actually populated these arrays. These are called by the main module. When exiting these other modules I can clearly see that the arrays are populated. But when reading them back in the main module, they were empty. This was rather strange for me (well, I am new to Python). However, when I change the way I import the sharedstuff.py in the main module to:

from globals import *

it worked (the arrays were populated).

Just sayin'


The easiest solution to this particular problem would have been to add another function within the module that would have stored the cursor in a variable global to the module. Then all the other functions could use it as well.

module1:

cursor = None

def setCursor(cur):
    global cursor
    cursor = cur

def method(some, args):
    global cursor
    do_stuff(cursor, some, args)

main program:

import module1

cursor = get_a_cursor()
module1.setCursor(cursor)
module1.method()

Since globals are module specific, you can add the following function to all imported modules, and then use it to:

  • Add singular variables (in dictionary format) as globals for those
  • Transfer your main module globals to it .

addglobals = lambda x: globals().update(x)

Then all you need to pass on current globals is:

import module

module.addglobals(globals())


Since I haven't seen it in the answers above, I thought I would add my simple workaround, which is just to add a global_dict argument to the function requiring the calling module's globals, and then pass the dict into the function when calling; e.g:

# external_module
def imported_function(global_dict=None):
    print(global_dict["a"])


# calling_module
a = 12
from external_module import imported_function
imported_function(global_dict=globals())

>>> 12