When you execute
import pygame
the pygame is fully imported and ready to work, no more imports are needed.
Now the question is about this line:
from pygame.locals import *
There are several reasons why this should be used, and a few reasons not to do so.
- Performance. When you type something like
foo.bar.baz.ClassName.classmethod()
, there will be 4 lookups in the namespace, which cost some time. The more such lines in code, the more unnecessary waste of time.
- Simplicity. When you write tutorials, you try to explain things as simple as it possible. So the less code, the better tutorial.
- Ease. When you type your code, you spread it to different files. Because it is easier to work with smaller side-files, and then import all of them in the main. But you completely understand what you are importing.
- Namespase pollution. When you import everything from module into globals, you are more limited in the choice of global variables. For example,
from struct import *
you can't name your function as pack
. So, before use such imports, you should explore the module. What does it contain? What does it import by itself?
- Mess. When you use such imports many times,
from foo import *
and from bar import *
and from baz import *
, some variables or constants may be shaded or overwritten. In this example, foo.version
is overwritten with bar.version
, now named as version
. So, foo.checkversion()
will not work correctly anymore.
The proper way is to import the commonly used functions in explicit form, or make them a quick reference, especially when you do not know the module well.
For example:
from foo.bar.baz import a_very_useful_function
or
import foo.bar.baz
quick_referenced_fn = foo.bar.baz.a_very_useful_function
Here quick_referenced_fn
is still foo.bar.baz.a_very_useful_function
and works in the namespace of foo.bar.baz
, but interpreter knows its address directly and will not make additional lookups.