On 09/07/2012 01:56 PM, Travis Griggs wrote: > I'm relatively new to Python (coming from strong C and Smalltalk > backgrounds). I've written a couple of relatively small apps (one or two .py > files). I'm using PyCharm (I love it). > > I'm curious what the pythonic approach is to creating your own reusable > modules. Any tutorials or high level explanations, or detailed, much > appreciated. > > For example, I have a small module called valvenumbers.py. It's a family of > functions that we use to do a variety of things with the serial numbers we > attach to some of our products. Now I'm making a little desktop app using > wxpython, and I want to use (import) that module. Using PyCharm, I have two > separate projects in sibling directories. And there's another separate > command line tool that wants to do the same. Currently, I just place a > symlink to the valvenumbers.py, local to the directory of these apps. This > seems like "the quickest thing that could possibly work", but I'm assuming > there's a more pythonic way to approach this general problem. > > TIA! > > Travis Griggs > "Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication." -- Leonardo Da Vinci >
import sys print sys.path This will show you your path for imports. The actual directories change by default with different python versions, but one of them will be suitable for putting new modules to be imported. Naturally, you don't want to add to the place where the stdlib is placed, but some of those are normal writable directories. There are also several ways to add your own directories to that path, but maybe you don't need that complexity yet. I'm sure others will be able to be more specific. -- DaveA -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list