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I got this error when executing find_modules() in a package directory. That is the directory contained an {{{ __init.py__}}} file: {{{ File "C:\Python254\lib\site-packages\joedorocak\find_modules.py", line 27, in find_modules s.add(module) NameError: global name 's' is not defined }}} It looks to me like s needs to be initialized (some place near "modules = set()"). I'm not sure what the protocol is here, so I'm just going to leave this comment in the discussion. |
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(none yet!) | All the best, JoeDorocak |
Here's how to find all the modules in some directory, and import them.
Contents
Finding Modules in a Directory
Is there a better way than just listing the contents of the directory, and taking those tiles that end with ".pyc" or ".py"..?
But perhaps there isn't.
1 import os
2
3 def find_modules(path="."):
4 """Return names of modules in a directory.
5
6 Returns module names in a list. Filenames that end in ".py" or
7 ".pyc" are considered to be modules. The extension is not included
8 in the returned list.
9 """
10 modules = set()
11 for filename in os.listdir(path):
12 module = None
13 if filename.endswith(".py"):
14 module = filename[:-3]
15 elif filename.endswith(".pyc"):
16 module = filename[:-4]
17 if module is not None:
18 s.add(module)
19 return list(modules)
Importing the Modules
How do you import a module, once you have it's name?
With the ImpModule! It dynamically loads named modules.
Finding the Things Inside a Module
Once you have your module, you can look inside it, with .__dict__.
1 module.__dict__
Finding Functions Within a Module
We just look for dictionary values that are of type types.FunctionType.
See Also
The DocXmlRpcServer page includes code demonstrating the use of these techniques.
Discussion
I got this error when executing find_modules() in a package directory. That is the directory contained an __init.py__ file:
File "C:\Python254\lib\site-packages\joedorocak\find_modules.py", line 27, in find_modules s.add(module) NameError: global name 's' is not defined
It looks to me like s needs to be initialized (some place near "modules = set()"). I'm not sure what the protocol is here, so I'm just going to leave this comment in the discussion.
All the best,