Hello , The problem I'm asking about is how can imported modules be aware of other imported modules so they don't have to re-import them (avoiding importing problems and Consicing code and imports ) Take Example :- in A.py :-
import B print dir() # no problems we can see B which contain re module and C module B.C.W() # our problem here we get an empty list in B.py :- import re import C in C.py :- def W(): print dir()# when called from A we get [] though other imports has been made to re and others my goal is basically making W() aware of the re module when called from A ---- why am i doing this in the first place I'm in the process of a medium project where imports of modules start to make a jungle and i wanted all needed imports to be in a single file (namely __init__.py) and then all imports are made once and other modules feel it another reason to do this that my project is offering 2 interfaces (Console and GUI through Qt) and i needed a general state class ( whether i'm in Console or GUI mode) to be available for all , for determining state and some public functions ,and just injecting Imports everywhere seems a bad technique in many ways (debugging , modifying ...etc ) in PHP "Require" would do the trick neatly ... so is there is something I'm missing here or the whole technique is bad in which case what do you suggest Thanks, Regards, Mohamed Yousef -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list