* rantingrick <rantingr...@gmail.com> [110704 12:00]: > On Jul 4, 1:11 pm, Tim Johnson <t...@johnsons-web.com> wrote: > > Well if you follow the python style guide (and most accepted styles > for global notation) then it's a trial exercise. You don't even have > to import anything!!! :) > > >>> GLOBAL_STR = 'str' > >>> GLOBAL_FLOAT = 1.33333 > >>> GLoBaL_Bs = '' > >>> dir() > ['GLOBAL_FLOAT', 'GLOBAL_STR', 'GLoBaL_Bs', '__builtins__', '__doc__', > '__name__', '__package__', 'item'] > >>> for item in dir(): > if item.isupper(): > print 'Found Global!', item Thanks for the reply: *but*
dir(<targetmodule>) will also show globals from other modules imported by the target module. So I would need a way to distinguish between those imported and those defined in <targetmodule> print(dir(targetmodule)) => ['Install', 'TestAddresses', '__builtins__', '__doc__', '__file__', '__name__', '__package__', 'chmod', 'consoleMessage', 'cp', 'debug', 'erh', 'exists', 'halt', 'is_list', 'load', 'makePath', 'mkdir', 'process', 'sys', 'traceback', 'usingCgi'] where 'TestAddresses' is a member of an imported module and 'usingCgi' is the only data variable defined in <targetmodule> regards -- Tim tim at johnsons-web dot com or akwebsoft dot com http://www.akwebsoft.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list