Python Language Modularization: Difference between revisions

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The initial blank output line is the empty string &#39;', which stands for current directory. The first match will be used. If a module with the same name as a module from standard library is encountered in the search path before the standard library, it will be used instead of the module coming from the standard library.
The initial blank output line is the empty string &#39;', which stands for current directory. The first match will be used. If a module with the same name as a module from standard library is encountered in the search path before the standard library, it will be used instead of the module coming from the standard library.
===Extending Module Search Path===
====Externally====
====Internally from the Program====


=Package=
=Package=

Revision as of 23:01, 15 February 2022

External

Internal

Overview

Python Script

A script is a module whose aim is to be executed. It has the same meaning as "program" or "application", but it is usually used to describe simple and small program. It contains a stored set of instructions that can be handed over to the Python interpreter. Python scripts have .py extensions.

Top-Level Script

Packages can be run as if they were scripts if the package provides a top-level script __main__.py.

Standalone Program

Module

A module is an organizational unit of Python code. It is a file with the .py extension containing Python code that can be imported inside another Python program. It can define functions, classes and variables. A module can also include runnable code. The file name is the module name with the suffix .py appended. Modules have a namespace containing arbitrary Python objects. Modules are loaded into Python by the process of importing, where the code in one module is made available to Python code in another module. Modules and packages are managed by a Python package manager like pip, Conda, Pipenv and Poetry.


Does this apply to module?

import pulumi_aws as aws

aws.ec2.SecurityGroup(....)

Module Name

The module name may not contain "_"

Module Search Path

When a module is imported from a code file, the runtime looks at a list of directory names and ZIP files stored in the standard sys module as the variable path. This list can be accessed and modified:

import sys
for i in sys.path:
  print(i)

 /opt/brew/Cellar/python@3.9/3.9.9/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.9/lib/python39.zip
 /opt/brew/Cellar/python@3.9/3.9.9/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.9/lib/python3.9
 /opt/brew/Cellar/python@3.9/3.9.9/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.9/lib/python3.9/lib-dynload
 /Users/ovidiu/my-project/venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages

The initial blank output line is the empty string '', which stands for current directory. The first match will be used. If a module with the same name as a module from standard library is encountered in the search path before the standard library, it will be used instead of the module coming from the standard library.

Extending Module Search Path

Externally

Internally from the Program

Package

A package is a Python module which can contain submodules or recursively, subpackages. Technically, a package is a Python module with a __path__ attribute. Packages allow for a hierarchical structuring of the module namespace using dot notation. In the same way that module avoid collisions between global variable names, packages avoid collision between module names. For example, the urllib package contains several modules: urllib.request, urllib.error, etc. Modules and packages are managed by a Python package manager like pip, Conda, Pipenv and Poetry.

Not clear yet how to define working packages. I've defined a package with an __init__.py and a __main__.py with a function defined inside __main__.py, and after import I get:

ImportError: cannot import name 'my_test_function' from 'my_package' (/Users/ovidiu/.../main/python/my_package/__init__.py)

Regular Package

A traditional package, such as a directory containing an __init__.py file.

__init__.py

https://docs.python.org/3/reference/import.html#regular-packages

__main__.py

The "main" module, which will be imported automatically when the package is imported.

Namespace Package

A PEP 420 package which serves only as a container for subpackages. Namespace packages may have no physical representation, and have no __init__.py file.

Package Metadata

Name: pulumi
Version: 2.11.2
Summary: Pulumi's Python SDK
Home-page: https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi
Author:
Author-email:
License: Apache 2.0
Location: /Users/ovidiu/Library/Python/3.8/lib/python/site-packages
Requires: dill, grpcio, protobuf
Required-by: pulumi-aws, pulumi-kubernetes, pulumi-random, pulumi-tls

Requires

Required-by

Importing

Importing All The Code from a Module

import mymodule

Clarify the difference between importing a module and a package.

TO PROCESS: The import system: https://docs.python.org/3/reference/import.html

Importing only a Function

from  urllib.request import urlopen

Importing from a Relative Path

Clarify this idiom:

sys.path.append("../sdk")
import some_module as blah_some_module
import some_other_module as blah_some_other_module

Library

The term library is simply a generic term for a bunch of code that was designed with the aim of being reused by many applications. It provides some generic functionality that can be used by specific applications. When a module or a package is published, people refer to it as a library.

Standard Library

If the published module or package is is available in the Python Module Index, it is referred to as a "standard library".

Python Standard Library

https://docs.python.org/3/library/

Notable Modules and Packages

These modules are available in the Python Standard Library, hence are referred to as "standard libraries".

Python Module Index

https://docs.python.org/3/py-modindex.html

Python Package Index PyPI

https://pypi.org

It can be searched with pip search.

Organizatorium

  • Each installation of Python may have different modules installed. Python determines the path to its modules by examining the location of the python3 executable.