Python Module Internal Representation and Introspection: Difference between revisions

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===<tt>__name__</tt>===
===<tt>__name__</tt>===
The <code>__name__</code? special variable contains the name of the module, when it was imported, as string.  
The <code>__name__</code> special variable contains the name of the module, when it was imported, as string.  
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
import mymodule
import mymodule

Revision as of 18:04, 4 January 2023

Internal

Overview

The module Class

All module and package instances are represented internally as instances of the module class.

Attributes

All object instances declared in the module (variables, functions, etc.) become attributes of the module instance and they are accessible with inspect.getmembers(). Additionally, the following special attributes are present:

__name__

The __name__ special variable contains the name of the module, when it was imported, as string.

import mymodule
assert mymodule.__name__ == 'mymodule'

When the module is executed directly with python mymodule.py, it is never imported, so __name__ is set to the "__main__" string.

__file__

Once imported, the file associated with the module can be determined using the module object's __file__ attribute, as string:

import mymodule
[...]
print(mymodule.__file__)

The directory portion of __file__ should be one of the directories in sys.path.

__doc__

The content of the module docstring, if declared, otherwise None.

__cached__

__loader__

__spec__

__package__

An empty string for a module, the name of the package for a package.

__path__

The __path__ attribute exists only for module instances that represent packages, not for those instances that represent ordinary modules.

__path__ contains a list with the paths of the package root directories, where the component modules, subpackages, __init__.py and __main__.py live.