Do I have to take out all the spaces in the file name to import it, or is there some way of telling import
that there are spaces?
You can also use importlib.import_module
function, which is a wrapper around __import__
.
foo_bar_mod = importlib.import_module("foo bar")
or
foo_bar_mod = importlib.import_module("path.to.foo bar")
More info: https://docs.python.org/3/library/importlib.html
Just to add to Banks' answer, if you are importing another file that you haven't saved in one of the directories Python checks for importing directories, you need to add the directory to your path with
import sys
sys.path.append("absolute/filepath/of/parent/directory/of/foo/bar")
before calling
foo_bar = __import__("foo bar")
or
foo_bar = importlib.import_module("foo bar")
This is something you don't have to do if you were importing it with import <module>
, where Python will check the current directory for the module. If you are importing a module from the same directory, for example, use
import os,sys
sys.path.append(os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)))
foo_bar = __import__('foo_bar')
Hope this saves someone else trying to import their own weirdly named file or a Python file they downloaded manually some time :)
If you want to do something like from foo_bar import *
(but with a space instead of an underscore), you can use execfile (docs here):
execfile("foo bar.py")
though it's better practice to avoid spaces in source file names.
You should take the spaces out of the filename. Because the filename is used as the identifier for imported modules (i.e. foo.py
will be imported as foo
) and Python identifiers can't have spaces, this isn't supported by the import
statement.
If you really need to do this for some reason, you can use the __import__
function:
foo_bar = __import__("foo bar")
This will import foo bar.py
as foo_bar
. This behaves a little bit different than the import
statement and you should avoid it.