How to do multiple imports in Python?

点点圈 提交于 2019-11-27 20:28:29
Brian

For known module, just separate them by commas:

import lib1, lib2, lib3, lib4, lib5

If you really need to programmatically import based on dynamic variables, a literal translation of your ruby would be:

modnames = "lib1 lib2 lib3 lib4 lib5".split()
for lib in modnames:
    globals()[lib] = __import__(lib)

Though there's no need for this in your example.

Try this:

import lib1, lib2, lib3, lib4, lib5

You can also change the name they are imported under in this way, like so:

import lib1 as l1, lib2 as l2, lib3, lib4 as l4, lib5

import lib1, lib2, lib3, lib4, lib5

txwikinger

You can import from a string which contains your module name by using the __import__ function.

requirements = [lib1, lib2, lib3, lib4, lib5]
for lib in requirements:
    x = __import__(lib)

You can use __import__ if you have a list of strings that represent modules, but it's probably cleaner if you follow the hint in the documentation and use importlib.import_module directly:

import importlib
requirements = [lib1, lib2, lib3, lib4, lib5]
imported_libs = {lib: importlib.import_module(lib) for lib in requirements}

You don't have the imported libraries as variables available this way but you could access them through the imported_libs dictionary:

>>> requirements = ['sys', 'itertools', 'collections', 'pickle']
>>> imported_libs = {lib: importlib.import_module(lib) for lib in requirements}
>>> imported_libs
{'collections': <module 'collections' from 'lib\\collections\\__init__.py'>,
 'itertools': <module 'itertools' (built-in)>,
 'pickle': <module 'pickle' from 'lib\\pickle.py'>,
 'sys': <module 'sys' (built-in)>}

>>> imported_libs['sys'].hexversion
50660592

You could also update your globals and then use them like they were imported "normally":

>>> globals().update(imported_libs)
>>> sys
<module 'sys' (built-in)>
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