问题
I have a project with an overarching namespace, with packages inside it. Here's the folder structure:
pypackage
├── pypackage <-- Source code for use in this project.
| |
│ ├── bin <-- Module: Cli entry point into pyproject.
| | ├── __init__.py
| | └── pypackage.py
| |
| └── core <-- Module: Core functionality.
| ├── __init__.py
| └── pypackage.py
|
├── tests
├── README.md
└── setup.py
Pretty simple. If I want to import it I use:
from pypackage.core import pypackage
and it works great because my setup.py looks like this:
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
...
NAME = 'pypackage'
setup(
name=NAME,
namespace_packages=[NAME],
packages=[f'{NAME}.{p}' for p in find_packages(where=NAME)],
entry_points={
"console_scripts": [
f'{NAME} = {NAME}.bin.{NAME}:cli',
]
},
...
)
However, I have legacy code that imports this pypackage
when it used to just be a stand alone python file. like this:
import pypackage
So how do I make it so I can keep the same structure with namespaces and subpackages but still import it the old way? How do I turn this:
from pypackage.core import pypackage
into this:
import pypackage
In other words, how do I alias the pypackage.core.pypackage
module to be pypackage
for when I'm importing pypackage
into an external project?
回答1:
You would add the 'old' names inside your new package by importing into the top-level package.
Names imported as globals in pypackage/__init__.py
are attributes on the pypackage
package. Make use of that to give access to 'legacy' locations:
# add all public names from pypackage.core.pypackage to the top level for
# legacy package use
from .core.pypackage import *
Now any code that uses import pypackage
can use pypackage.foo
and pypackage.bar
if in reality these objects were defined in pypackage.core.pypackage
instead.
Now, because pypackage
is a setuptools namespace package you have a different problem; namespace packages are there for multiple separate distributions to install into so that top-level package must either be empty or only contain a minimum __init__.py
file (namespace packages created with empty directories require Python 3.3).
If you are the only publisher of distributions that use this namespace, you can cheat a little here and use a single __init__.py
file in your core
package that could use pkg-util-style __init__.py file with the additional import I used above, but then you must not use any __init__.py
files in other distribution packages or require that they all use the exact same __init__.py
content. Coordination is key here.
Or you would have to use a different approach. Leave pypackage
as a legacy wrapper module, and rename the new package format to use a new, different top-level name that can live next to the old module. At this point you can then just include the legacy package in your project, directly, as an extra top-level module.
回答2:
Martin Pieters has the right idea if I were using packages, but a namespace package is a setuptools thing.
So that didn't work. after more research, I learned that there's no way to do what I'm trying to do. So if I really want to do it I must convert everything to a regular package hierarchy instead of namespace package, then use martin's solution.
I've decided to modify the legacy code instead to import it the new way.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/53486486/python-namespaces-vs-packages-making-a-package-the-default-namespace