I have a directory structure that looks like this:
project/
__init__.py
foo/
__init.py__
first.py
second.py
third.py
plum.py
In project/foo/__init__.py I import classes from first.py, second.py and third.py and put them in __all__.
There's a class in first.py named WonderfulThing which I'd like to use in second.py, and want to import by importing * from foo. (It's outside of the scope of this question why I'd like to do so, assume I have a good reason.)
In second.py I've tried from .foo import *, from foo import * and from . import * and in none of these cases is WonderfulThing imported. I also tried from ..foo import *, which raises an error "Attempted relative import beyond toplevel package".
I've read the docs and the PEP, and I can't work out how to make this work. Any assistance would be appreciated.
Clarification/Edit: It seems like I may have been misunderstanding the way __all__ works in packages. I was using it the same as in modules,
from .first import WonderfulThing
__all__ = [ "WonderfulThing" ]
but looking at the docs again it seems to suggest that __all__ may only be used in packages to specify the names of modules to be imported by default; there doesn't seem to be any way to include anything that's not a module.
Is this correct?
Edit: A non-wildcard import failed (cannot import name WonderfulThing). Trying from . import foo failed, but import foo works. Unfortunately, dir(foo) shows nothing.

__all__can contain the names of any objects. They don't have to be (and usually aren't) only modules. – Jon-Eric Oct 17 at 3:04['WonderfulThing', '__all__', '__builtins__', '__doc__', '__file__', '__name__', '__package__', '__path__', 'first']You must be doing something fundamentally wrong, or you aren't showing us the actual code, because what you describe works just fine. – Lennart Regebro Oct 17 at 10:29