I usually do this on pyflakes: import whatever assert whatever # silence pyflakes
Pyflakes and pep8 have no way of knowing django will import and use your module, or whether you are just importing a module for the side effects, so they issue a warning anyway. Assert'ing counts as using the module, so it counts as an used import. On 5 May 2013 17:05, "Adam Jiang" <jiang.a...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I am new to python. Now, I am woring on an application within Django > framework. When I checked my code with pep8 and pyflakes, some warning > messages show up-'Foobar imported but unused'. Obviously, it indicates > that some modules are imprted to current module but never get > references. However, it seems the message is wrong in this case: > > # file: urls.py > urlpattens = patterns( > '', > url('^signup/$', 'signup') > } > > # file: register.py > def signup(request): > return ... > > # file: views.py > import signup from register > > The warning message is shown in file views.py. It seems to me that the > code is okay because Django requires all functions serve as 'view' is > typically go into views.py. 'import' is about get 'signup' function > into module 'views.py'. Or, I am totally wrong? Is there a proper way > to avoid this warnning? > > Best regards, > /Adam > -- > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
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