Preload/Globally certain classes in Python
I Have got some models (mapped on database tables), in a python project. I want to make them preload when the project bootup so i don't need to do like this in every file
from db.models.user import User
I tried to load them in init.py file, but they are not available.
python-3.x
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I Have got some models (mapped on database tables), in a python project. I want to make them preload when the project bootup so i don't need to do like this in every file
from db.models.user import User
I tried to load them in init.py file, but they are not available.
python-3.x
add a comment |
I Have got some models (mapped on database tables), in a python project. I want to make them preload when the project bootup so i don't need to do like this in every file
from db.models.user import User
I tried to load them in init.py file, but they are not available.
python-3.x
I Have got some models (mapped on database tables), in a python project. I want to make them preload when the project bootup so i don't need to do like this in every file
from db.models.user import User
I tried to load them in init.py file, but they are not available.
python-3.x
python-3.x
asked Nov 16 '18 at 2:02
GullGull
1,35721223
1,35721223
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add a comment |
1 Answer
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active
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TL;DR: You need to import your models in every file.
In Python, every module (*.py
file) has its own namespace (set of global variables). There is no way to have a truly global variable (or class, function, etc.), because every name is local to the module in which it is defined. This is a deliberate feature of Python; it would be very bad if (for example) you could redefine the range()
function in some random module and break everyone else's code.
You can place the import from db.models.user import User
in db/models/__init__.py
, but that won't make User
globally accessible. Instead, it will create an alias db.models.User
for the original class (db.models.user.User
), which you still have to import as normal. This may save you a small amount of typing when importing the model in other places, and is a great way to flatten deep hierarchies of packages, but it does not make anything truly global, because you cannot make things global.
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
TL;DR: You need to import your models in every file.
In Python, every module (*.py
file) has its own namespace (set of global variables). There is no way to have a truly global variable (or class, function, etc.), because every name is local to the module in which it is defined. This is a deliberate feature of Python; it would be very bad if (for example) you could redefine the range()
function in some random module and break everyone else's code.
You can place the import from db.models.user import User
in db/models/__init__.py
, but that won't make User
globally accessible. Instead, it will create an alias db.models.User
for the original class (db.models.user.User
), which you still have to import as normal. This may save you a small amount of typing when importing the model in other places, and is a great way to flatten deep hierarchies of packages, but it does not make anything truly global, because you cannot make things global.
add a comment |
TL;DR: You need to import your models in every file.
In Python, every module (*.py
file) has its own namespace (set of global variables). There is no way to have a truly global variable (or class, function, etc.), because every name is local to the module in which it is defined. This is a deliberate feature of Python; it would be very bad if (for example) you could redefine the range()
function in some random module and break everyone else's code.
You can place the import from db.models.user import User
in db/models/__init__.py
, but that won't make User
globally accessible. Instead, it will create an alias db.models.User
for the original class (db.models.user.User
), which you still have to import as normal. This may save you a small amount of typing when importing the model in other places, and is a great way to flatten deep hierarchies of packages, but it does not make anything truly global, because you cannot make things global.
add a comment |
TL;DR: You need to import your models in every file.
In Python, every module (*.py
file) has its own namespace (set of global variables). There is no way to have a truly global variable (or class, function, etc.), because every name is local to the module in which it is defined. This is a deliberate feature of Python; it would be very bad if (for example) you could redefine the range()
function in some random module and break everyone else's code.
You can place the import from db.models.user import User
in db/models/__init__.py
, but that won't make User
globally accessible. Instead, it will create an alias db.models.User
for the original class (db.models.user.User
), which you still have to import as normal. This may save you a small amount of typing when importing the model in other places, and is a great way to flatten deep hierarchies of packages, but it does not make anything truly global, because you cannot make things global.
TL;DR: You need to import your models in every file.
In Python, every module (*.py
file) has its own namespace (set of global variables). There is no way to have a truly global variable (or class, function, etc.), because every name is local to the module in which it is defined. This is a deliberate feature of Python; it would be very bad if (for example) you could redefine the range()
function in some random module and break everyone else's code.
You can place the import from db.models.user import User
in db/models/__init__.py
, but that won't make User
globally accessible. Instead, it will create an alias db.models.User
for the original class (db.models.user.User
), which you still have to import as normal. This may save you a small amount of typing when importing the model in other places, and is a great way to flatten deep hierarchies of packages, but it does not make anything truly global, because you cannot make things global.
answered Nov 16 '18 at 2:49
KevinKevin
19.2k53660
19.2k53660
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