122

I want to run:

python somescript.py somecommand

But, when I run this I need PYTHONPATH to include a certain directory. I can't just add it to my environment variables because the directory I want to add changes based on what project I'm running. Is there a way to alter PYTHONPATH while running a script? Note: I don't even have a PYTHONPATH variable, so I don't need to worry about appending to it vs overriding it during running of this script.

7 Answers 7

199

For Mac/Linux;

PYTHONPATH=/foo/bar/baz python somescript.py somecommand

For Windows, setup a wrapper pythonpath.bat;

@ECHO OFF
setlocal
set PYTHONPATH=%1
python %2 %3
endlocal

and call pythonpath.bat script file like;

pythonpath.bat /foo/bar/baz somescript.py somecommand
9
  • @İsmail - thanks. However, how can I do that while running a script from my command prompt? I'm not running Python, importing stuff, and running it manually.
    – orokusaki
    Jan 2, 2011 at 20:00
  • 1
    On Mac/Linux you would do PYTHONPATH=/foo/bar python somescript.py somecommand
    – ismail
    Jan 2, 2011 at 20:02
  • I tried python -c"import sys;sys.path.append('/my/dir')" and then python myscript.py mycommand, but it obviously doesn't share the path from the first interpreter session with the next. Ah, just saw your next comment, trying now... Didn't work on WinXP.
    – orokusaki
    Jan 2, 2011 at 20:04
  • 1
    There is no unset environment variable command on Windows. Instead add a setlocal after the initial echo off and then an implicit endlocal will occur when the .bat script ends (and PYTHONPATH will be restored to its previous value).
    – martineau
    Jan 2, 2011 at 23:36
  • 5
    On Windows if you want to append a path the existing PYTHONPATH, you might want to use set PYTHONPATH=%PYTHONPATH%;%1.
    – martineau
    Jan 2, 2011 at 23:39
54
import sys
sys.path.append('your certain directory')

Basically sys.path is a list with all the search paths for python modules. It is initialized by the interpreter. The content of PYTHONPATH is automatically added to the end of that list.

3
  • 11
    or sys.path.insert(0,'/some/directory') to put it at the front of your path. This allows your material to override other stuff that may already be on pythonpath.
    – sienkiew
    Feb 2, 2011 at 18:43
  • I used this answer to run uninttest outside pydev-eclipse IDE.
    – LAL
    Jan 18, 2017 at 15:32
  • sys.path.append(r'D:\PyCharmProjects\cheese_shoppe') example in Windows.
    – Bob Stein
    Oct 14, 2017 at 22:48
23

If you are running the command from a POSIX-compliant shell, like bash, you can set the environment variable like this:

PYTHONPATH="/path/to" python somescript.py somecommand

If it's all on one line, the PYTHONPATH environment value applies only to that one command.

$ echo $PYTHONPATH

$ python -c 'import sys;print("/tmp/pydir" in sys.path)'
False
$ PYTHONPATH=/tmp/pydir python -c 'import sys;print("/tmp/pydir" in sys.path)'
True
$ echo $PYTHONPATH
1
  • Just what I was looking for, thanks a lot. For some reason running python -c "import sys; sys.path.insert(0,'my/path'); import mymodule" did not work.
    – Luke Davis
    Feb 6, 2017 at 19:00
3

You can paste the following code in the __init__.py of the package from which you want to import:

import sys
from pathlib import Path

sys.path.insert(0, Path(__file__).parent)

Then you can import modules from that package as you would usually do.

import <module_name>

<module_name>.<method_on_module>()
Example:
import algorithms

algorithms.run_algo1()

Your IDE might underline the module name, but that won't be a problem when you run the Python interpreted.

Also, if you need to read the path, later on, you can do:

DIR_PATH = Path(sys.path[0])
1
  • thanks.. u have to stringify it i.e. str(Path(file).parent)
    – sten
    Jun 24, 2023 at 15:43
2

You may try this to execute a function inside your script

python -c "import sys; sys.path.append('/your/script/path'); import yourscript; yourscript.yourfunction()"
0

This is for windows:

For example, I have a folder named "mygrapher" on my desktop. Inside, there's folders called "calculation" and "graphing" that contain Python files that my main file "grapherMain.py" needs. Also, "grapherMain.py" is stored in "graphing". To run everything without moving files, I can make a batch script. Let's call this batch file "rungraph.bat".

@ECHO OFF
setlocal
set PYTHONPATH=%cd%\grapher;%cd%\calculation
python %cd%\grapher\grapherMain.py
endlocal

This script is located in "mygrapher". To run things, I would get into my command prompt, then do:

>cd Desktop\mygrapher (this navigates into the "mygrapher" folder)
>rungraph.bat (this executes the batch file)
1
  • 7
    and how is this different from @İsmail 'cartman' Dönmez answer? Jul 27, 2012 at 19:39
0

this works on windows.

testpackage structure:

D:\testpackage_path\TESTPACKAGE
│   first.py
│   __init__.py
│
├───sub1
│   │   sub1a.py
│   │   sub1b.py
│   │   __init__.py

test_PYTHONPATH.py:

import os
from testpackage import first
from testpackage.sub1 import sub1a
print(f'PYTHONPATH={os.environ.get("PYTHONPATH")}')
first.first_method()
sub1a.sub1a_method1()

from the command line:

C:\>set PYTHONPATH=D:\testpackage_path && test_PYTHONPATH.py
PYTHONPATH=D:\testpackage_path 
running first_method()
running sub1a_method1()

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