134

I have a foo.py

def foo():
    print "test"

In IPython I use:

In [6]:  import foo
In [7]:  foo.foo()
test

Then I changed the foo() to:

def foo():
    print "test changed"

In IPython, the result for invoking is still test:

In [10]:  import foo
In [11]:  foo.foo()
test

Then I use:

In [15]: del foo
In [16]:  import foo
In [17]:  foo.foo()
test

I delete the foo.pyc in same folder foo.py exists, but still no luck.

May I know how to reimport the updated code in runtime?

1

5 Answers 5

171

For Python 2.x

reload(foo)

For Python 3.x

import importlib
import foo #import the module here, so that it can be reloaded.
importlib.reload(foo)
11
  • 23
    Actually, just "reload(foo)" - no need to re-attribute it
    – jsbueno
    Nov 6, 2010 at 4:00
  • 2
    I couldn't get it work. I'm getiing TypeError: reload() argument must be module
    – Burak
    Nov 5, 2012 at 10:12
  • 2
    @Burak, Is the argument you are passing to reload a module?. eg. You should be doing import foo beforehand Nov 6, 2012 at 3:25
  • 35
    Note that if you did from foo import * or from foo import bar, the symbol foo doesn't get defined. You need to import sys then reload(sys.modules['foo']) or perhaps reload(sys.modules[bar.__module__])
    – drevicko
    Oct 28, 2013 at 1:02
  • 3
    Please, let Python 2.x die a.s.p. and stop supporting Python 2.x ! A countdown for retirement of python 2.x pythonclock.org . Oct 27, 2019 at 14:40
89

IPython3's autoreload feature works just right.

I am using the actual example from the webpage. First load the 'autoreload' feature.

In []: %load_ext autoreload
In []: %autoreload 2

Then import the module you want to test:

In []: import foo
In []: foo.some_function()
Out[]: 42

Open foo.py in an editor and change some_function to return 43

In []: foo.some_function()
Out[]: 43

It also works if you import the function directly.

In []: from foo import some_function
In []: some_function()
Out[]: 42

Make change in some_function to return 43.

In []: some_function()
Out[]: 43
2
  • 2
    from foo import some_function, not working working under Jupyterlab Python 3.7.3 Oct 15, 2019 at 9:22
  • 1
    Initially, it seemed like from foo import some_function was not working here either. However, I noticed that the actual reload does not happen when we call from foo import some_function (as I was expecting). It happens only when you save the module file! So after re-saving foo.py (even without any modifications), then it was automagically reimported. Didn't even need to call the import command again. So just save your module file and try again, and it should work. Oct 18 at 1:28
73

In addition to gnibbler's answer:

This changed in Python 3 to:

>>> import imp
>>> imp.reload(foo)

As @onnodb points out, imp is deprecated in favor of importlib since Python 3.4:

>>> import importlib
>>> importlib.reload(foo)
2
  • 6
    Just a small sidenote: In later versions of Python 3.x, "imp" is deprecated in favor of "importlib". Works the same way, though.
    – onnodb
    May 2, 2015 at 16:47
  • 1
    I really wish Python3 were better than Python2, always. But no, they had to eff things up. Nov 12, 2022 at 19:22
8

If you want this to happen automatically, there is the autoreload module that comes with iPython.

2
  • from foo import some_function, not working working under Jupyterlab Python 3.7.3 Oct 15, 2019 at 9:23
  • 1
    @Robert Nowak I ran into this, but it worked when I tried just "import some_function" without the "from foo" later in my code after the original from foo import some_function. Dec 18, 2020 at 0:06
2

In [15] instead of del foo, use

import sys
del sys.modules["foo"]

to delete foo from the module cache

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