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The __debug__ variable is handy in part because it affects every module. If I want to create another variable that works the same way, how would I do it?

The variable (let's be original and call it 'foo') doesn't have to be truly global, in the sense that if I change foo in one module, it is updated in others. I'd be fine if I could set foo before importing other modules and then they would see the same value for it.

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6 Answers

vote up 7 vote down check

I don't endorse this solution in any way, shape or form. But if you add a variable to the __builtin__ module, it will be accessible as if a global from any other module that includes __builtin__ -- which is all of them, by default.

a.py contains

print foo

b.py contains

import __builtin__
__builtin__.foo = 1
import a

The result is that "1" is printed.

Edit: The __builtin__ module is available as the local symbol __builtins__ -- that's the reason for the discrepancy between two of these answers.

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vote up 5 vote down

If you need a global cross-module variable maybe just simple global module-level variable will suffice.

a.py:

var = 1

b.py:

import a
print a.var
import c
print a.var

c.py:

import a
a.var = 2

Test:

$ python b.py
# -> 1 2

Real-world example: Django's settings.py (though in Django apps settings are used by importing the object django.conf.settings).

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vote up 3 vote down

Define a module ( call it "globalbaz" ) and have the variables defined inside it. All the modules using this "pseudoglobal" should import the "globalbaz" module, and refer to it using "globalbaz.var_name"

This works regardless of the place of the change, you can change the variable before or after the import. The imported module will use the latest value. (I tested this in a toy example)

For clarification, globalbaz.py looks just like this:

var_name = "my_useful_string"
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vote up 2 vote down

Global variables are usually a bad idea, but you can do this by assigning to __builtins__:

__builtins__.foo = 'something'
print foo

Also, modules themselves are variables that you can access from any module. So if you define a module called my_globals.py:

# my_globals.py
foo = 'something'

Then you can use that from anywhere as well:

import my_globals
print my_globals.foo

Using modules rather than modifying __builtins__ is generally a cleaner way to do globals of this sort.

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vote up 0 vote down

Okay, turning this on it's head, why do you want a global variable? ..or in other words, there are probably better ways of achieving the solution you're after if you can explain exactly what you want?

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vote up 0 vote down

This sounds like modifying the __builtin__ name space. To do it:

import __builtin__
__builtin__.foo = 'some-value'

Do not use the __builtins__ directly (notice the extra "s") - apparently this can be a dictionary or a module. Thanks to ΤΖΩΤΖΙΟΥ for pointing this out, more can be found here.

Now foo is available for use everywhere.

I don't recommend doing this generally, but the use of this is up to the programmer.

Assigning to it must be done as above, just setting foo = 'some-other-value' will only set it in the current namespace.

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I remember (from comp.lang.python) that using directly builtins should be avoided; instead, import builtin and use that, as Curt Hagenlocher suggested. – ΤΖΩΤΖΙΟΥ Sep 27 '08 at 0:13

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