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I'm trying to create a simple multi-level package:

test_levels.py
level1/
        __init__.py (empty file)
        level2/
                __init__.py  (only contents: __all__ = ["leaf"])
                leaf.py

leaf.py:

class Leaf(object):
    print("read Leaf class")
    pass

if __name__ == "__main__":
    x = Leaf()
    print("done")

test_levels.py:

from level1.level2 import *
x = Leaf()

Running leaf.py directly works fine, but running test_levels.py returns the output below, where I was expecting no output:

read Leaf class
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "C:\Dev\intranet\test_levels.py", line 2, in <module>
    x = Leaf()
NameError: name 'Leaf' is not defined

Can someone point out what I'm doing wrong?

3 Answers 3

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try to add

from leaf import *

in file level1/level2/__init__.py

upd: as in previous comment, add dot before module name, and remove "__all__" declaration.

$ cat level1/level2/__init__.py
from .leaf import Leaf
$ cat level1/level2/leaf.py
class Leaf:
    def __init__(self):
        print("hello")
$ cat test.py
from level1.level2 import *
x = Leaf()
$ python test.py
hello
3
  • I think from .leaf will only work in Python 3 (or if you import absolute_imports from __future__ in Python 2).
    – Thomas K
    Nov 26, 2010 at 16:51
  • Yes, but i think that topicstarter uses exactly python3, because he wrote print(...) instead of print ... Nov 26, 2010 at 16:59
  • OK, looking at the documentation, I think from .leaf should work from Python 2.5 onwards. The dot is only required in Python 3--it means that leaf is in the same package as the file importing from it.
    – Thomas K
    Nov 26, 2010 at 23:35
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In level1/level2/__init__.py, I think you want to do from leaf import * (or, in Py3k, from .leaf import *).

When you import from level1.level2, you're really importing the __init__.py file in that directory. Since you haven't defined Leaf in there, you don't get it by importing that.

2
  • I am using Python 2.6, and adding from leaf import * to level1/level2/__init__.py works, but given that it's contents are already: all = ["leaf"] and that "read Leaf class" is in the output, shouldn't it be working already? or can the all not be used in this context?
    – RuiDC
    Nov 26, 2010 at 17:01
  • __all__ sets the list of names that will be used by from <name> import *, but those names still have to be defined in that context. In your structure, the Leaf class is in level1.level2.leaf. So, in test_levels.py, you could call leaf.Leaf(). Or you could do from level1.level2.leaf import *.
    – Thomas K
    Nov 26, 2010 at 23:21
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Are you expecting to import all the variable names from all the modules in that package? That's a horrible idea. To do what you want, it should be

from level1.level2.leaf import *

or even better yet to remove the wildcard import, which is usually bad, it should be

from level1.level2.leaf import Leaf

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