Calling a function of a module from a string with the function's name in Python shows us how to call a function by using getattr("bar")(), but this assumes that we have the module foo imported already.
How would would we then go about 开发者_JAVA百科calling for the execution of "foo.bar" assuming that we probably also have to perform the import of foo (or from bar import foo)?
Use the __import__(....)
function:
http://docs.python.org/library/functions.html#import
(David almost had it, but I think his example is more appropriate for what to do if you want to redefine the normal import process - to e.g. load from a zip file)
You can use find_module
and load_module
from the imp
module to load a module whose name and/or location is determined at execution time.
The example at the end of the documentation topic explains how:
import imp
import sys
def __import__(name, globals=None, locals=None, fromlist=None):
# Fast path: see if the module has already been imported.
try:
return sys.modules[name]
except KeyError:
pass
# If any of the following calls raises an exception,
# there's a problem we can't handle -- let the caller handle it.
fp, pathname, description = imp.find_module(name)
try:
return imp.load_module(name, fp, pathname, description)
finally:
# Since we may exit via an exception, close fp explicitly.
if fp:
fp.close()
Here is what i finally came up with to get the function i wanted back out from a dottedname
from string import join
def dotsplit(dottedname):
module = join(dottedname.split('.')[:-1],'.')
function = dottedname.split('.')[-1]
return module, function
def load(dottedname):
mod, func = dotsplit(dottedname)
try:
mod = __import__(mod, globals(), locals(), [func,], -1)
return getattr(mod,func)
except (ImportError, AttributeError):
return dottedname
this solution is not working? Calling a function of a module from a string with the function's name in Python
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