Let’s say I have the following structure:

my_module/
  __init__.py
  utilities.py

and __init__.py contains

from .utilities import SomeUtilityFunction

Is there a way to prevent or alert developers when they do

from my_module.utilities import SomeUtilityFunction

instead of

from my_module import SomeUtilityFunction

The problem arose when a few modules started using a function that was imported inside a module in which it wasn’t used, while also being available on the module’s __init__.py, so after linting the file and removing the unused import my tests started failing.

any other advice for situations like this?

  • Chais@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Bullshit!

    module/__init__.py:

    __all__ = ["foo", "bar"]
    

    module/foo.py:

    def foo():
        print("foo")
    

    module/bar.py:

    def bar():
        print("bar")
    

    module/baz.py:

    def baz():
        print("baz")
    

    main.py:

    from module import *
    from module import baz
    
    if __name__ == "__main__":
        print("main")
        foo.foo()
        bar.bar()
        baz.baz()
    

    Output:

    $ python main.py 
    main
    foo
    bar
    baz
    

    No errors, warnings or anything.