I'm currently re-factoring a project (formerly big one file) into several seperate python files, each of which runs a specific part of my application.
Eg, GUIthread.py
runs the GUI, Computethread.py
does some maths, etc etc.
Each thread includes the use of functions from imported modules like math
, time
, numpy
, etc etc.
I already have a file globalClasses.py
containing class definitions for my datatypes etc, which each .py file imports at the start, as per recomendation here: http://effbot.org/pyfaq/how-do-i-share-global-variables-across-modules.htm . This is working well.
What I would like to do is have all my 3rdparty module imports in the globals
file as well, so that I can write, for example, import math
once but have all of my project files able to use math
functions.
Questions:
1. Is this possible?
2. Is it a good idea/is it good Python practice?
My current solution is just to put
import math
import time
import numpy
...
(plus imports for all the other modules I'm using as well)
at the top of every file in my project... But that doesn't seem very tidy, and it's easy to forget to move a dependency's import statement when moving code-chunks from file to file...
import module
multiple times doesn't cause an actual repetition of the import work; I was just wondering if it's possible to avoid the repetition of writing the codeimport module
. Thanks for the link though