Relative imports - ModuleNotFoundError: No module named x
This is the first time I've really sat down and tried python 3, and seem to be failing miserably. I have the following two files:
- test.py
- config.py
config.py has a few functions defined in it as well as a few variables. I've stripped it down to the following:
config.py
debug = True
test.py
import config
print (config.debug)
I also have an __init__.py
However, I'm getting the following error:
ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'config'
I'm aware that the py3 convention is to use absolute imports:
from . import config
However, this leads to the following error:
ImportError: cannot import name 'config'
So I'm at a loss as to what to do here... Any help is greatly appreciated. :)
TL;DR: You can't do relative imports from the file you execute since __main__
module is not a part of a package.
Absolute imports - import something available on sys.path
Relative imports - import something relative to the current module, must be a part of a package
If you're running both variants in exactly the same way, one of them should work. Here is an example that should help you understand what's going on. Let's add another main.py
file with the overall directory structure like this:
.
./main.py
./ryan/__init__.py
./ryan/config.py
./ryan/test.py
And let's update test.py
to see what's going on:
# config.py
debug = True
# test.py
print(__name__)
try:
# Trying to find module in the parent package
from . import config
print(config.debug)
del config
except ImportError:
print('Relative import failed')
try:
# Trying to find module on sys.path
import config
print(config.debug)
except ModuleNotFoundError:
print('Absolute import failed')
# main.py
import ryan.test
Let's run test.py
first:
$ python ryan/test.py
__main__
Relative import failed
True
Here "test" is the __main__
module and doesn't know anything about belonging to a package. However import config
should work, since the ryan
folder will be added to sys.path
.
Let's run main.py
instead:
$ python main.py
ryan.test
True
Absolute import failed
And here test is inside of the "ryan" package and can perform relative imports. import config
fails since implicit relative imports are not allowed in Python 3.
Hope this helped.
P.S.: If you're sticking with Python 3 there is no more need for __init__.py
files.
I figured it out. Very frustrating, especially coming from python2.
You have to add a .
to the module, regardless of whether or not it is relative or absolute.
I created the directory setup as follows.
/main.py
--/lib
--/__init__.py
--/mody.py
--/modx.py
modx.py
def does_something():
return "I gave you this string."
mody.py
from modx import does_something
def loaded():
string = does_something()
print(string)
main.py
from lib import mody
mody.loaded()
when I execute main, this is what happens
$ python main.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "main.py", line 2, in <module>
from lib import mody
File "/mnt/c/Users/Austin/Dropbox/Source/Python/virtualenviron/mock/package/lib/mody.py", line 1, in <module>
from modx import does_something
ImportError: No module named 'modx'
I ran 2to3, and the core output was this
RefactoringTool: Refactored lib/mody.py
--- lib/mody.py (original)
+++ lib/mody.py (refactored)
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-from modx import does_something
+from .modx import does_something
def loaded():
string = does_something()
RefactoringTool: Files that need to be modified:
RefactoringTool: lib/modx.py
RefactoringTool: lib/mody.py
I had to modify mody.py's import statement to fix it
try:
from modx import does_something
except ImportError:
from .modx import does_something
def loaded():
string = does_something()
print(string)
Then I ran main.py again and got the expected output
$ python main.py
I gave you this string.
Lastly, just to clean it up and make it portable between 2 and 3.
from __future__ import absolute_import
from .modx import does_something