I am using the PyMOL molecular viewer as a subset of a larger program, and for ease of reading am breaking up my files like so...
### command1ClassFile.py
class command1Class():
def command1(self):
print "do action 1, this requires pymol functions"
### command2ClassFile.py
class command2Class():
def command2(self):
print "do action 2, this also requires pymol functions"
### mainModule.py
import command1ClassFile, command2ClassFile
class commandsClass(command1Class, command2Class):
pass
class guiClass(parentClass, commandsClass):
def onLeftClick(self):
self.command1()
def onRightClick(self):
self.command2()
# this imports the module as well as launching the program, unfortunately
import pymol
pymol.finish_launching()
I can't just add "import pymol" to the beginning of the other files, because that would launch the program multiple times. I can solve this by just using one .py file, but that leads to an excessively large source file.
I did not catch anyone's interest on the PyMOL mailing list, so I was hoping there was some other way around this. If not, is there a better way to break up code? I am used to being spoiled by header files in C++, and the architecture of Python projects is bit difficult for me to handle properly.
EDIT: For different cases, is using multiple inheritance across files and dummy compilation classes in this way a good way to structure python projects with complicated methods?
command
methods?from pymol import command1, command2, class1
.