How do I load a Python module given its full path?
Note that the file can be anywhere in the filesystem where the user has access rights.
How do I load a Python module given its full path?
Note that the file can be anywhere in the filesystem where the user has access rights.
Assuming that your MyClass
is in MyClass.py
, you can use this one line to dynamically import it/
cls = `MyClass`
MyClass = getattr(__import__(cls, globals(), locals(), [cls], 0), cls)
$ pip install importmonkey
[github] [pip] [docs]
# In test.py
from importmonkey import add_path
add_path("../relative/path") # relative to current __file__
add_path("/my/absolute/path/to/somewhere") # absolute path
import project
# You can add as many paths as needed, absolute or relative, in any file.
# Relative paths start from the current __file__ directory.
# Normal unix path conventions work so you can use '..' and '.' and so on.
# The paths you try to add are checked for validity etc. help(add_path) for details.
Disclosure of affiliation: I made importmonkey.
Here's my 2024 solution to this question - does not require path to a .py
file, path to the parent of the module folder is sufficient.
import importlib
import importlib.machinery
import importlib.util
pkg = "mypkg"
spec = importlib.machinery.PathFinder().find_spec(pkg, ["/path/to/mypkg-parent"])
mod = importlib.util.module_from_spec(spec)
sys.modules[pkg] = mod # needed for exec_module to work
spec.loader.exec_module(mod)
sys.modules[pkg] = importlib.import_module(pkg)
The last statement is necessary to ensure that the full module is present in sys.modules
(including submodules).
You can use importfile from pydoc
from pydoc import importfile
module = importfile('/full/path/to/module/module.py')
name = module.myclass() # myclass is a class inside your python file
import module
i mean it is can compile variables, functions and classes ?
Here's a way of loading files sorta like C, etc.
from importlib.machinery import SourceFileLoader
import os
def LOAD (MODULE_PATH):
if (MODULE_PATH [ 0 ] == "/"):
FULL_PATH = MODULE_PATH;
else:
DIR_PATH = os.path.dirname (os.path.realpath (__file__))
FULL_PATH = os.path.normpath (DIR_PATH + "/" + MODULE_PATH)
return SourceFileLoader (FULL_PATH, FULL_PATH).load_module ()
Implementations Where:
Y = LOAD ("../Z.py")
A = LOAD ("./A.py")
D = LOAD ("./C/D.py")
A_ = LOAD ("/IMPORTS/A.py")
Y.DEF ();
A.DEF ();
D.DEF ();
A_.DEF ();
Where each of the files looks like this:
def DEF ():
print ("A");
The best way, I think, is from the official documentation (29.1. imp — Access the import internals):
import imp
import sys
def __import__(name, globals=None, locals=None, fromlist=None):
# Fast path: see if the module has already been imported.
try:
return sys.modules[name]
except KeyError:
pass
# If any of the following calls raises an exception,
# there's a problem we can't handle -- let the caller handle it.
fp, pathname, description = imp.find_module(name)
try:
return imp.load_module(name, fp, pathname, description)
finally:
# Since we may exit via an exception, close fp explicitly.
if fp:
fp.close()
I find this is a simple answer:
module = dict()
code = """
import json
def testhi() :
return json.dumps({"key" : "value"}, indent = 4 )
"""
exec(code, module)
x = module['testhi']()
print(x)
Something special is to import a module with absolute path with Exec(): (exec takes a code string or code object. While eval takes an expression.)
PYMODULE = 'C:\maXbox\mX47464\maxbox4\examples\histogram15.py';
Execstring(LoadStringJ(PYMODULE));
And then get values or object with eval():
println('get module data: '+evalStr('pyplot.hist(x)'));
Load a module with exec is like an import with wildcard namespace:
Execstring('sys.path.append(r'+'"'+PYMODULEPATH+'")');
Execstring('from histogram import *');
import
,virtualenv
,pip
,setuptools
whatnot should all be thrown out and replaced with working code. I just tried to grokvirtualenv
or was itpipenv
and had to work thru the equivalent of a Jumbo Jet manual. How that contrivance is paraded as The Solution to dealing with deps totally escapes me.