As the other answer says, there's a bunch of default paths:
- the
PYTHONPATH
environment variable
$prefix/lib/pythonX.Y
on Unix-likes, where $prefix
is basically "where the binary is located" - so by default it's /usr/lib/pythonX.Y
, but it could also be virtualenv/lib/pythonX.Y
. There's also $execprefix
, but that is usually the same as $prefix
Importantly, in addition to this, there is a couple of built-in modules. sys
is one of them. When you write import sys
, Python will first look into the list of built-ins, and if it finds it, it will not open any files, just do the import.
And when you import other modules, that are not built-in, python will internally look into sys.path
to find them. For instance, one of the first things python does is import site
, which it finds on sys.path
. And this file has instructions to add other import locations: the site-packages
directory, your home directory paths, possibly a bunch of other places.
So yes, the sys
module is one of those that are "inherently" in the interpreter.
Why do you have to import it then?
Well, basically because it is a module, and you must always import a module to use it. In a way it's just a formality - you could save a little memory by not importing it (the memory that represents "sys
exists in your program", even though the actual code of the sys module is loaded anyway), but this is not really important.
But the python development team made a decision that modules are never imported automatically, so when you want to use it, you have to ask for it explicitly. This also means that by default, the word "sys" is free for you to use, e.g., as a variable or a function name - and it's always better to leave as many names free for the programmer as possible.