* dieter [160209 23:03]:
> Carl Meyer writes:
> > ...
> > If you omit the future-import in Python 2.7, `import config` will import
> > the neighboring app/config.py by default, and there is no way to import
> > the top-level config.py.
>
> There is the "__import__" builtin function which allows
Carl Meyer writes:
> ...
> If you omit the future-import in Python 2.7, `import config` will import
> the neighboring app/config.py by default, and there is no way to import
> the top-level config.py.
There is the "__import__" builtin function which allows to specify
the "parent package" indirect
* Carl Meyer [160209 15:28]:
> Hi Tim,
<...>
> The proper way to do this in Python 2.7 is to place `from __future__
> import absolute_import` at the top of flask/app/__init__.py (maybe best
> at the top of every Python file in your project, to keep the behavior
> consistent). Once you have that f
Hi Tim,
On 02/09/2016 04:23 PM, Tim Johnson wrote:
> Before proceding, let me state that this is to satisfy my
> curiousity, not to solve any problem I am having.
>
> Scenario :
> Web application developed at /some/dir/sites/flask/
>
> If I have a package - let us call it app and in my
> /some/d
Before proceding, let me state that this is to satisfy my
curiousity, not to solve any problem I am having.
Scenario :
Web application developed at /some/dir/sites/flask/
If I have a package - let us call it app and in my
/some/dir/sites/flask/app/__init__.py is the following:
from config import