52

I'm trying to import a module (venues) from an IPython shell. The venues module is correctly imported but it then tries itself to import a module named makesoup and fails to do so.

I'm located in the ~ directory and am trying to import the venues.py file located in the subdirectory processors. The makesoup.pyfile is also located in the processors subdirectory, which means any Python script near it should be able to find it, right?

In [1]: import processors.venues
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ImportError                               Traceback (most recent call last)
<ipython-input-1-765135ed9288> in <module>()
----> 1 import processors.venues

~/processors/venues.py in <module>()
      7 """
      8 
----> 9 import makesoup
     10 import re
     11 

ImportError: No module named 'makesoup'

I have added an empty __init__.py in both the ~ and processors directories, unsuccessfully.

Note: the makesoup module is correctly imported when I'm located in processors but I know this is not the only way it should work.

0

3 Answers 3

75

The makesoup.py file is also located in the processors subdirectory, which means any Python script near it should be able to find it, right?

No. This feature was changed in Python 3 and that syntax no longer works.

Change the import makesoup to this:

from . import makesoup

Or to this:

from processors import makesoup

Both of these will make it impossible to run python processors/venues.py directly, though you can still do python -m processors.venues from your home directory.

5
  • Thank you Kevin. However, I don't understand why these solutions would make it impossible to run venues.pydirectly. Can you tell me why? Dec 8, 2014 at 20:18
  • If you use an explicit relative import (the first option I listed), the __package__ magic variable must be set, but python won't do this when running a script directly without -m. If you use an absolute import, Python probably won't be able to find the processors package, since it is not in the same directory as the script. Again, -m will fix this.
    – Kevin
    Dec 8, 2014 at 20:28
  • 11
    I also didn't realize this change when moving to Python 3. If you only want to import a function in a file try this from .makesoup import this_function
    – blaylockbk
    Aug 1, 2018 at 21:05
  • 2
    The answer should be edited with @blaylockbk comment. Worked for me
    – Ernest
    Feb 19, 2019 at 13:42
  • Just a small note, if you just wanted to import a single symbol from makesoup, you can use: from .makesoup import symbol_from_makesoup
    – Peter
    Jan 10, 2020 at 0:24
3

Sometimes, this does not work:

from . import xxx

Maybe someone will tell you to add init.py under the directory. It won't work for some special cases as well.

The most useful way would be to check the sys.path first with:

import sys
print(sys.path)

Then you can find where you should import from.

There is an another way as well:

import os
import sys
sys.path.append(os.path.abspath(os.path.join(os.path.dirname("__file__"), '..')))

or use insert function instead:

sys.path.insert(0, xxx)

These two ways are suitable for small project. I will recommend you choose the first one if your project is complex and huge.

0
0

As of today, I had the same issue and I can confirm that the following works if the mymodule file is in the same directory.

from . import mymodule

I'm using Python3.10.11 on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS (if that helps)

0

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.