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Where is the __builtin__ module in Python3? Why was it renamed?

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python

I was curious about the __builtin__ module and how it's used, but I can't find it in Python3! Why was it moved?

Python 2.7

>>> import __builtin__ >>> 

Python 3.2

>>> import __builtin__ Traceback (most recent call last):   File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> ImportError: No module named __builtin__ >>> 
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Derek Litz Avatar asked Jan 28 '12 19:01

Derek Litz


People also ask

What is__ builtins__ in Python?

The builtins module is automatically loaded every time Python interpreter starts, either as a top level execution environment or as interactive session. The Object class, which happens to be the base class for all Python objects, is defined in this module.

Where are Python Builtins located?

UPDATE You can find builtins module's code in Python/bltinmodule. c from the Python source code.

Which of the following statement retrieves names of all builtin module names in Python?

The compiled-in module names are in sys. builtin_module_names .


1 Answers

The __builtin__ module was renamed to builtins in Python3.

This change solves 2 sources of confusion for the average Python developer.

  • Is it '__builtins__' or '__builtin__' that is in the global namespace? Darn s!
  • Is __builtin__ a special method name or a module? I can't tell.

This confusion mainly arises because of the violation of pep8 convention. Also, the lack of pluralization on the module hinders communication as well. Both of these are greatly illustrated by the lengths Guido must go to explain the following from http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2009-March/003821.html:

[CPython] looks at the globals, which contain a special magic entry __builtins__ (with an 's') which is the dict where built-in functions are looked up. When this dict is the same object as the default built-in dict (which is __builtin__.__dict__ where __builtin__ -- without 's' -- is the module defining the built-in functions) it gives you supervisor privileges;…

For example,

Python2.7

>>> import __builtin__ >>> vars(globals()['__builtins__']) is vars(__builtin__) True >>>  

Python3.2

>>> import builtins >>> vars(globals()['__builtins__']) is vars(builtins) True >>> 

Related resources:

Other name changes - http://docs.pythonsprints.com/python3_porting/py-porting.html#name-changes

For a succinct explanation of how __builtins__ is used in name resolution - __builtin__ module in Python

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Derek Litz Avatar answered Oct 21 '22 07:10

Derek Litz