On Sun, 30 Nov 2008 17:43:46 +0100, Filip Gruszczyński <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
This is first time that I am building python application that is
larger than a single module and I would like to do it right. I google
it a bit, finding some stuff about not using src directory (which I
have seen so many times, that I believed it be standard) and using
packages. Still, there are few things, that I would like to achieve
with this structure:
* being able to use pychecker a lot - catching all typos in one shot
instead of running app many times really saves me a lot of time
* being able to write some unit tests
* having clean division of code among packages and modules (I have
seen some projects, where modules are pretty large - I would like to
keep them logically divided, event if they stay smaller)
My project is a tool for people interested in role playing games. My
current structure looks something like this:
/src
rpgDirectory.py (main script, running the app)
src/rpg
plans.py
support.py
gui.py
iosystem.py
src/rpg/character
model.py
sheet.py
gui.py
handlers.py
requirements.py
The problem is, that modules from src/rpg/character use classes
defined in support.py. Therefore I have to use absolute paths to
import it and this works only, when I run rpgDirectory.py. When I use
pychecker, it can't import this module and fails. Any suggestions, how
can I avoid this and what structure should I use?
http://jcalderone.livejournal.com/39794.html
Jean-Paul
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list