Given a path to a file, I need the package name to pass to importlib.import_module()
so that relative imports will work correctly. I can't import it and then check module.__package__
because it won't import successfully.
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Can you add what you have tried to far including your folder / file structure?– Klaus D.Apr 23, 2015 at 14:48
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2 Answers
Here's one rather generic method:
import pathlib
import sys
def get_module_name(path):
f = pathlib.Path(path).resolve()
for i in map(pathlib.Path, sys.path):
try:
f.relative_to(i)
except ValueError:
pass
else:
*parts, fname = f.relative_to(i).parts
return ".".join(parts), [f.stem]
module, fromlist = get_module_name("Programming/Python/kernprof.py")
print(module, fromlist)
imported_module = __import__(module, fromlist=fromlist)
print(imported_module)
print(getattr(imported_module, fromlist[0]))
Outputs:
Programming.Python ['kernprof']
<module 'Programming.Python' (namespace)>
<module 'Programming.Python.kernprof' from '/home/matthew/Programming/Python/kernprof.py'>
This solution can handle import with any path from sys.path
, but cannot do relative imports (imports above the sys.path
). For the how __import__
is used, see Why does Python's __import__ require fromlist?.
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This method has some limitations because it makes a static determination using the directory structure without processing init.py files or other ways to monkey with deciding which files belong to which package, but it's good enough for my purposes.– ceridwenApr 28, 2015 at 17:32
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Yeah, processing
__init__
s and co would be pretty complicated, with some possibly unwanted results. Apr 29, 2015 at 15:51
What about this helper ?
import os
def get_parent_package(path):
parent_path = os.path.split(path)[0]
while parent_path != os.sep:
if '__init__.py' in os.listdir(parent_path):
return os.path.basename(parent_path)
parent_path = os.path.split(parent_path)[0]
return None
parent_path != os.sep must be improved if you are under windows.
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The major problem with this, as I discovered, is that in Python 3.3+ init.py is no longer needed to define a module, see Nick Coghlan's discussion at python-notes.curiousefficiency.org/en/latest/python_concepts/…. There can be other problems with traversing the directory tree from the bottom up for packages containing subpackages.– ceridwenApr 28, 2015 at 17:29