As Fredrik Lundh states:
Anyway, here’s how these statements and functions work:
import X
imports the module X, and creates a reference to that module
in the current namespace. Or in other words, after you’ve run this
statement, you can use X.name
to refer to things defined in module X.
from X import *
imports the module X, and creates references in the
current namespace to all public objects defined by that module (that
is, everything that doesn’t have a name starting with “_”). Or in
other words, after you’ve run this statement, you can simply use a
plain name to refer to things defined in module X. But X itself is not
defined, so X.name
doesn’t work. And if name was already defined, it
is replaced by the new version. And if name in X is changed to point
to some other object, your module won’t notice.
from X import a, b, c
imports the module X, and creates references in
the current namespace to the given objects. Or in other words, you can
now use a
and b
and c
in your program.
Finally, X = __import__(‘X’)
works like import X
, with the difference
that you 1) pass the module name as a string, and 2) explicitly assign
it to a variable in your current namespace.
And by the way that's the last one method that you're intrested in.
Simply write (for example):
var = "datetime"
module = __import__(var)