I saw in this useful Q&A that one can use reload(whatever_module)
or, in Python 3, imp.reload(whatever_module)
.
My question is, what if I had said from whatever_module impor开发者_开发知识库t *
to import? Then I have no whatever_module
to refer to when I use reload()
. Are you guys gonna yell at me for throwing a whole module into the global namespace? :)
I agree with the "don't do this generally" consensus, but...
The correct answer is:
from importlib import reload
import X
reload(X)
from X import Y # or * for that matter
Never use import *
; it destroys readability.
Also, be aware that reloading modules is almost never useful. You can't predict what state your program will end up in after reloading a module, so it's a great way to get incomprehensible, unreproduceable bugs.
A cleaner answer is a mix of Catskul's good answer and Ohad Cohen's use of sys.modules
and direct redefinition:
import sys
Y = reload(sys.modules["X"]).Y # reload() returns the new module
In fact, doing import X
creates a new symbol (X
) that might be redefined in the code that follows, which is unnecessary (whereas sys
is a common module, so this should not happen).
The interesting point here is that from X import Y
does not add X
to the namespace, but adds module X
to the list of known modules (sys.modules
), which allows the module to be reloaded (and its new contents accessed).
More generally, if multiple imported symbols need to be updated, it is then more convenient to import them like this:
import sys
reload(sys.modules["X"]) # No X symbol created!
from X import Y, Z, T
A
from module import *
takes all “exported” objects from module
and binds them to module-level (or whatever-your-scope-was-level) names. You can reload the module as:
reload(sys.modules['module'])
but that won't do you any good: the whatever-your-scope-was-level names still point at the old objects.
I've found another way to deal with reloading a module when importing like:
from directory.module import my_func
It's nice to know how do modules are being imported generally.
The module is searched in sys.modules
dictionary. If it already exists in sys.modules - the module will not be imported again.
So if we would like to reload our module, we can just remove it from sys.modules and import again:
import sys
from directory.module import my_func
my_func('spam')
# output: 'spam'
# here I have edited my_func in module.py
my_func('spam') # same result as above
#output: 'spam'
del sys.modules[my_func.__module__]
from directory.module import my_func
my_func('spam') # new result
#output: 'spam spam spam spam spam'
If You would like to get reloaded module when running whole script, you could use exception handler:
try:
del sys.modules[my_func.__module__]
except NameError as e:
print("""Can't remove module that haven't been imported.
Error: {}""".format(e))
from utils.module import my_func
..........
# code of the script here
When importing using from whatever_module import whatever
, whatever
is counted as part of the importing module, so to reload it - you should reload your module. But just reloading your module you will still get the old whatever
- from the already-imported whatever_module
, so you need to reload(whatever_module), and than reload your module:
# reload(whatever_module), if you imported it
reload(sys.modules['whatever_module'])
reload(sys.modules[__name__])
if you used from whatever_module import whatever
you can also consider
whatever=reload(sys.modules['whatever_module']).whatever
or
whatever=reload(whatever_module).whatever
import re
for mod in sys.modules.values():
if re.search('name', str(mod)):
reload(mod)
for python 3.7 :
from importlib import reload #import function "reload"
import YourModule #import your any modules
reload(YourModule) #reload your module
Reload function can be called from your own function
def yourFunc():
reload(YourModule)
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