I believe you will need to track the modules in the folder *dbi *in the root file '__init__.py'.
So there's an alternative to use the statement __all__ in the root filet __init__.py, check the link where I find a use case: *https://sentry.io/answers/what-is-init-py-for-in-python/#using-__init__py-to-run-code-and-control--imports <https://sentry.io/answers/what-is-init-py-for-in-python/#using-__init__py-to-run-code-and-control--imports>* References to take more deep in those issues: PEP-3147 <https://peps.python.org/pep-3147/> https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/modules.html <https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/modules.html#intra-package-references> in this link above we have some examples of relative imports: from . import echo from .. import formats from ..filters import equalizer In your code you're using "import *" , this is not a good practice when using only some features in your module(s) because you'll inject more garbage into memory if there are features you're not using. Share with us the updates on your code. Ronaldo Em qua., 7 de ago. de 2024 às 14:40, Tobiah via Python-list < python-list@python.org> escreveu: > I have an old library from 20 some years ago > for use with python2, that is structured like this: > > rcs > ├── dbi > │ ├── __init__.py > │ ├── dbi.py > │ └── regos.py > └── __init__.py -- *empty* > > > the __init__.py file under 'rcs' is empty. > The one under rcs.dbi contains: > > from dbi import * > from regos import * > > > With python2, I'd go: > > import rcs.dbi > > then I'd have access to stuff in regos.py > as: > > rcs.dbi.feature() (Where 'feature' is defined in regos.py) > > > When I do the same import with python3, I get: > > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "/home/toby/me", line 1, in <module> > import rcs.dbi > File "/usr/regos-1.0/lib/python/rcs/dbi/__init__.py", line 1, in > <module> > from dbi import * > ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'dbi' > > > What's changed, and how do I fix it? > > > Thanks! > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list