(please don't top-post. Put your reply *after* the message you're quoting.)
Stef Mientki wrote:
<div class="moz-text-flowed" style="font-family: -moz-fixed">thanks
very much Stephen,
This is the first time I become aware of the difference between script
and module !!
Starting with the wrong book "Learning Python" second edition, from
Lutz and Ascher, based on Python 2.3"
in combination with using Python only from a high level IDE
(PyScripter), (never seeing the m-switch),
I never was aware of this important difference.
A quick Googling on "python module vs script" doesn't reveal many
(good) links,
the best one I found is
http://effbot.org/zone/import-confusion.htm
thanks again,
Stef Mientki
<snip>
The point you should get from that link is
"Don't do circular imports. Ever."
It's generally worse if the circle includes the original script, treated
as a module, but even between modules it can get you into trouble in
many subtle ways. Some of them cause runtime errors, so you'll "fix"
them. Some of them will just fail quietly, and you'll be searching for
subtle bugs. I don't agree with the author's "advice" that sometimes
moving the import to the end helps. Best advice is to break the circle,
by "rearranging" the modules, moving commonly needed symbols into
someplace else that both import.
It's probably safe if none of the modules in the circle has any
top-level code that references imported symbols. But top-level code
includes default values for function definitions, and class initializers
for class definitions.
Does anybody know if there's a way to activate a warning for this?
DaveA
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