Python error: AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute
Solution 1:
When you import lib
, you're importing the package. The only file to get evaluated and run in this case is the 0 byte __init__.py
in the lib directory.
If you want access to your function, you can do something like this from lib.mod1 import mod1
and then run the mod12
function like so mod1.mod12()
.
If you want to be able to access mod1
when you import lib
, you need to put an import mod1
inside the __init__.py
file inside the lib
directory.
Solution 2:
More accurately, your mod1
and lib
directories are not modules, they are packages. The file mod11.py
is a module.
Python does not automatically import subpackages or modules. You have to explicitly do it, or "cheat" by adding import statements in the initializers.
>>> import lib
>>> dir(lib)
['__builtins__', '__doc__', '__file__', '__name__', '__package__', '__path__']
>>> import lib.pkg1
>>> import lib.pkg1.mod11
>>> lib.pkg1.mod11.mod12()
mod12
An alternative is to use the from
syntax to "pull" a module from a package into you scripts namespace.
>>> from lib.pkg1 import mod11
Then reference the function as simply mod11.mod12()
.
Solution 3:
The way I would do it is to leave the __ init__.py files empty, and do:
import lib.mod1.mod11
lib.mod1.mod11.mod12()
or
from lib.mod1.mod11 import mod12
mod12()
You may find that the mod1 dir is unnecessary, just have mod12.py in lib.
Solution 4:
My solution is put those imports in __init__.py
of lib:
in file: __init__.py
import mod1
Then,
import lib
lib.mod1
would work fine.