If I create a package named foo
that imports bar
, why is bar
visible under foo
as foo.bar
when I import foo
in another module? Is there a way to prevent this; to keep bar
hidden so as not to clutter the namespace?
3 Answers
Import bar wherever you use it, rather than globally
If bar is being used in a function, import as
def func():
import bar
....
Or even,
if __name__ == '__main__':
import bar
my_main(bar)
Or if you love class
es,
class Fubar():
def __init__(self):
import bar
self.bar = bar
-
Will importing bar every time func is called harm performance? It seems so.– EmreJul 1, 2014 at 7:25
-
It will, you can consider setting the bar as instance of a class and use it, if you use classes– rjvJul 1, 2014 at 7:28
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1@Emre Time it. Here,
python -m timeit 'import sys' 'sys.argv[1]'
needs1000000 loops, best of 3: 0.965 usec per loop
, whilepython -m timeit '' 'import sys; sys.argv[1]'
needs1000000 loops, best of 3: 0.957 usec per loop
. So it's essentially the same.– glglglJul 1, 2014 at 7:30
Imports in Python are really just another form of name assignment. There is really no difference between an object that has been imported into foo and one that has been defined in foo - they are both visible internally and externally in exactly the same way. So no, there is no way to prevent this.
I don't really see how this is cluttering the namespace, though. You've still only imported one name, foo, into your other module.
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If you import a long list of packages, it can crowd out the ones you actually want to expose when you do command completion. It's pollution from the user's perspective.– EmreJul 1, 2014 at 7:22
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But you're not importing a list, you're just importing foo. The modules imported inside foo shouldn't affect autocompletion, surely. Jul 1, 2014 at 7:33
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I meant to say there are packages besides foo that are similarly imported. Autocomplete does indeed see and suggest bar.– EmreJul 1, 2014 at 7:34
TL;DR: Python Imports create named bindings for pieces of code so they can be referenced and used.
An import is essentially binding a piece of code to a name. So the namespace should always reflect what has been imported. If you hide that you may end up causing unexpected problems for someone else or yourself.
If you are importing the wrong modules, importing modules you don't use, or have a ton of imports because you have 10 classes in one file you should consider fixing the underlying issue(s). Not trying to hide it by messing with how modules are imported.
foo.bar
from being visible? And in any event,foo
still requiresbar
so I can't just eliminate theimport
.