File "C:\Users\Administrator\Documents\Mibot\oops\blinkserv.py", line 82, in __init__
self.serv = socket(AF_INET,SOCK_STREAM)
TypeError: 'module' object is not callable
Why am I getting this error? I'm confused.
How can I solve this error?
File "C:\Users\Administrator\Documents\Mibot\oops\blinkserv.py", line 82, in __init__
self.serv = socket(AF_INET,SOCK_STREAM)
TypeError: 'module' object is not callable
Why am I getting this error? I'm confused.
How can I solve this error?
socket
is a module, containing the class socket
.
You need to do socket.socket(...)
or from socket import socket
:
>>> import socket
>>> socket
<module 'socket' from 'C:\Python27\lib\socket.pyc'>
>>> socket.socket
<class 'socket._socketobject'>
>>>
>>> from socket import socket
>>> socket
<class 'socket._socketobject'>
This is what the error message means:
It says module object is not callable
, because your code is calling a module object. A module object is the type of thing you get when you import a module. What you were trying to do is to call a class object within the module object that happens to have the same name as the module that contains it.
Here is a way to logically break down this sort of error:
module object is not callable
. Python is telling me my code trying to call something that cannot be called. What is my code trying to call?"socket
. That should be callable! Is the variable socket
is what I think it is?`print(socket)
socket.socket
was a little confusing. I simply did import write_to_file
and then, since the method I was using inside of write_to_file.py
is named writeToTextFile
I simply rand write_to_file.writeToTextFile
Assume that the content of YourClass.py is:
class YourClass:
# ......
If you use:
from YourClassParentDir import YourClass # means YourClass.py
In this way, you will get TypeError: 'module' object is not callable if you then tried to call YourClass()
.
But, if you use:
from YourClassParentDir.YourClass import YourClass # means Class YourClass
or use YourClass.YourClass()
, it works.
Add to the main __init__.py
in YourClassParentDir, e.g.:
from .YourClass import YourClass
Then, you will have an instance of your class ready when you import it into another script:
from YourClassParentDir import YourClass
from .YourClass import YourClass
in the __init__.py
file ?
Commented
Apr 2, 2018 at 10:09
Short answer: You are calling a file/directory as a function instead of real function
Read on:
This kind of error happens when you import module thinking it as function and call it. So in python module is a .py file. Packages(directories) can also be considered as modules. Let's say I have a create.py file. In that file I have a function like this:
#inside create.py
def create():
pass
Now, in another code file if I do like this:
#inside main.py file
import create
create() #here create refers to create.py , so create.create() would work here
It gives this error as am calling the create.py file as a function. so I gotta do this:
from create import create
create() #now it works.
Here is another gotcha, that took me awhile to see even after reading these posts. I was setting up a script to call my python bin scripts. I was getting the module not callable too.
My zig was that I was doing the following:
from mypackage.bin import myscript
...
myscript(...)
when my zag needed to do the following:
from mypackage.bin.myscript import myscript
...
myscript(...)
In summary, double check your package and module nesting.
What I am trying to do is have a scripts directory that does not have the *.py extension, and still have the 'bin' modules to be in mypackage/bin and these have my *.py extension. I am new to packaging, and trying to follow the standards as I am interpreting them. So, I have at the setup root:
setup.py
scripts/
script1
mypackage/
bin/
script1.py
subpackage1/
subpackage_etc/
If this is not compliant with standard, please let me know.
It seems like what you've done is imported the socket
module as import socket
. Therefore socket
is the module. You either need to change that line to self.serv = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
, as well as every other use of the socket
module, or change the import statement to from socket import socket
.
Or you've got an import socket
after your from socket import *
:
>>> from socket import *
>>> serv = socket(AF_INET,SOCK_STREAM)
>>> import socket
>>> serv = socket(AF_INET,SOCK_STREAM)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<input>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: 'module' object is not callable
import socket
, which will import the module socket
overriding the class socket
. See code snippet in edit.
from <...> import *
imports are bad, bad, bad is more or less this: normally you know exactly what's in the global namespace, because it's exactly what you've put there. But when you import *
, you fill that namespace with all sorts of stuff that other modules define. In this case, it's unclear where the name socket
came from -- is it the module or something defined in that module? If you always use import socket
or from socket import socket
, you will never have this problem, since you can see exactly what names are in use.
I know this thread is a year old, but the real problem is in your working directory.
I believe that the working directory is C:\Users\Administrator\Documents\Mibot\oops\
. Please check for the file named socket.py
in this directory. Once you find it, rename or move it. When you import socket, socket.py
from the current directory is used instead of the socket.py
from Python's directory. Hope this helped. :)
Note: Never use the file names from Python's directory to save your program's file name; it will conflict with your program(s).
socket.py
. Well, that was causing this exact same error message. This page put me on the right track: python-notes.curiousefficiency.org/en/latest/python_concepts/…
Commented
May 26, 2016 at 22:04
Here's a possible extra edge case that I stumbled upon and was puzzled by for a while, hope it helps someone:
In some_module/a.py
:
def a():
pass
In some_module/b.py
:
from . import a
def b():
a()
In some_module/__init__.py
:
from .b import b
from .a import a
main.py
:
from some_module import b
b()
Then because when main.py loads b, it goes via __init__.py
which tries to load b.py
before a.py
. This means when b.py
tries to load a
it gets the module rather than the function - meaning you'll get the error message module object is not callable
The solution here is to swap the order in some_module/__init__.py
:
from .a import a
from .b import b
Or, if this would create a circular dependency, change your file names to not match the functions, and load directly from the files rather than relying on __init__.py
I got the same error below:
TypeError: 'module' object is not callable
When calling time() to print as shown below:
import time
print(time()) # Here
So to solve the error, I called time.time()
as shown below:
import time
print(time.time()) # Here
Or, I imported time
from time as shown below:
from time import time # Here
print(time())
Also, I got the same error in Django View because I use @transaction
as shown below:
# "views.py"
from django.http import HttpResponse
from django.db import transaction
# ↓ Here ↓
@transaction
def test(request):
return HttpResponse("Test")
So to solve the error, I use @transaction.atomic
as shown below:
# "views.py"
from django.http import HttpResponse
from django.db import transaction
# ↓ Here ↓
@transaction.atomic
def test(request):
return HttpResponse("Test")
When configuring an console_scripts entrypoint in setup.py I found this issue existed when the endpoint was a module or package rather than a function within the module.
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/Users/ubuntu/.virtualenvs/virtualenv/bin/mycli", line 11, in <module>
load_entry_point('my-package', 'console_scripts', 'mycli')()
TypeError: 'module' object is not callable
For example
from setuptools import setup
setup (
# ...
entry_points = {
'console_scripts': [mycli=package.module.submodule]
},
# ...
)
Should have been
from setuptools import setup
setup (
# ...
entry_points = {
'console_scripts': [mycli=package.module.submodule:main]
},
# ...
)
So that it would refer to a callable function rather than the module itself. It seems to make no difference if the module has a if __name__ == '__main__':
block. This will not make the module callable.
scripts
parameter instead of entry_points
I faced the same problem. then I tried not using
from YourClass import YourClass
I just copied the whole code of YourClass.py and run it on the main code (or current code).it solved the error
you are using the name of a module instead of the name of the class use
import socket
and then
socket.socket(...)
its a weird thing with the module, but you can also use something like
import socket as sock
and then use
sock.socket(...)
I guess you have overridden the builtin function/variable or something else "module" by setting the global variable "module". just print the module see whats in it.
I had this error when I was trying to use optuna (a library for hyperparameter tuning) with LightGBM. After an hour struggle I realized that I was importing class directly and that was creating an issue.
import lightgbm as lgb
def LGB_Objective(trial):
parameters = {
'objective_type': 'regression',
'max_depth': trial.suggest_int('max_depth', 10, 60),
'boosting': trial.suggest_categorical('boosting', ['gbdt', 'rf', 'dart']),
'data_sample_strategy': 'bagging',
'num_iterations': trial.suggest_int('num_iterations', 50, 250),
'learning_rate': trial.suggest_float('learning_rate', 0.01, 1.0),
'reg_alpha': trial.suggest_float('reg_alpha', 0.01, 1.0),
'reg_lambda': trial.suggest_float('reg_lambda', 0.01, 1.0)
}
'''.....LightGBM model....'''
model_lgb = lgb(**parameters)
model_lgb.fit(x_train, y_train)
y_pred = model_lgb.predict(x_test)
return mse(y_test, y_pred, squared=True)
study_lgb = optuna.create_study(direction='minimize', study_name='lgb_regression')
study_lgb.optimize(LGB_Objective, n_trials=200)
Here, the line model_lgb = lgb(**parameters)
was trying to call the cLass itself.
When I digged into the __init__.py
file in site_packages folder of LGB installation as below, I identified the module which was fit to me (I was working on regression problem). I therefore imported LGBMRegressor and replaced lgb in my code with LGBMRegressor and it started working.
You can check in your code if you are importing the entire class/directory (by mistake) or the target module within the class.
from lightgbm import LGBMRegressor
def LGB_Objective(trial):
parameters = {
'objective_type': 'regression',
'max_depth': trial.suggest_int('max_depth', 10, 60),
'boosting': trial.suggest_categorical('boosting', ['gbdt', 'rf', 'dart']),
'data_sample_strategy': 'bagging',
'num_iterations': trial.suggest_int('num_iterations', 50, 250),
'learning_rate': trial.suggest_float('learning_rate', 0.01, 1.0),
'reg_alpha': trial.suggest_float('reg_alpha', 0.01, 1.0),
'reg_lambda': trial.suggest_float('reg_lambda', 0.01, 1.0)
}
'''.....LightGBM model....'''
model_lgb = LGBMRegressor(**parameters) #here I've changed lgb to LGBMRegressor
model_lgb.fit(x_train, y_train)
y_pred = model_lgb.predict(x_test)
return mse(y_test, y_pred, squared=True)
study_lgb = optuna.create_study(direction='minimize', study_name='lgb_regression')
study_lgb.optimize(LGB_Objective, n_trials=200)
in your case try it
from socket import socket
in addition
#in a separate file you define a class like:
class one:
def __init__(self, name, value):
self.name = name
self.value = value
pass
#and in other file you define a other class.
#and you want use defined class inside it.like:
from one import one as clsOne #this model of import a class solve the error
class two:
item = clsOne("A", 22)
print(item.name)
pass
A simple way to solve this problem is export thePYTHONPATH
variable enviroment. For example, for Python 2.6 in Debian/GNU Linux:
export PYTHONPATH=/usr/lib/python2.6`
In other operating systems, you would first find the location of this module or the socket.py
file.
check the import statements since a module is not callable. In Python, everything (including functions, methods, modules, classes etc.) is an object.