On Mon, 28 May 2007 23:46:00 -0400, Ron Provost wrote > [...] python is not happy about my circular imports [...]
A circular import is not a problem in itself. I'm guessing you're running into a situation like this: Module A imports module B and then defines an important class. Module B imports A (which does nothing because A is already partially imported) and then defines a class that depends on the class that is defined in module A. That causes a NameError. The root of the problem is that all statements are executed in the order in which they appear, and B is imported before A had a chance to define the class that B depends on. Note that import statements don't have to be at the top of the file. Try moving each import statement to the latest possible point in the code, i.e. right before the first occurence of whatever names you're importing from the respective modules. That way, each module gets to define as much as it possibly can before it gets side-tracked by importing other modules. If my guess doesn't help, you're going to have to post at least the exception/traceback you're getting, and you're probably going to have to post some code, too. Good luck, -- Carsten Haese http://informixdb.sourceforge.net -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list