Quick answer: IO is a submodule. Submodules need to be imported from the parent module explicitly.
Long answer: From section 5.4.2 of the python docs:
When a submodule is loaded using any mechanism (e.g. importlib APIs, the import or import-from statements, or built-in import()) a binding is placed in the parent module’s namespace to the submodule object. For example, if package spam has a submodule foo, after importing spam.foo, spam will have an attribute foo which is bound to the submodule. Let’s say you have the following directory structure:
spam/
__init__.py
foo.py
bar.py
and spam/init.py has the following lines in it:
from .foo import Foo
from .bar import Bar
then executing the following puts a name binding to foo and bar in the spam module:
>>>
>>> import spam
>>> spam.foo
<module 'spam.foo' from '/tmp/imports/spam/foo.py'>
>>> spam.bar
<module 'spam.bar' from '/tmp/imports/spam/bar.py'>
Given Python’s familiar name binding rules this might seem surprising, but it’s actually a fundamental feature of the import system. The invariant holding is that if you have sys.modules['spam'] and sys.modules['spam.foo'] (as you would after the above import), the latter must appear as the foo attribute of the former.
os
automatically pull their submodules (os.path
) into their namespace. It's not obvious that this is the case!