On Tuesday, April 8, 2008 10:06:46 PM UTC+2, Torsten Bronger wrote:
> Hallöchen!
> 
> I have a rather fat module that represents a document parser --
> inline elements, block elements, and the like.  Now I want to split
> it into many modules to make everything more manageable.
> 
> But at the moment I don't see how to avoid cyclic imports:  A
> document element A, which is represented my module parser.A, may
> contain the element B, as defined in parser.B.  And vice versa.  So
> both modules must import each other, as far as I can see.
> 
> I know that cyclic imports work in Python under certain
> circumstances.  Can anyone refer me to a page which explains *when*
> this works?  Because at least once, the imported module was not
> "finished" and thus largely unusual.
> 
> Thank you!
> 
> Tschö,
> Torsten.
> 


If you do "import foo" inside bar and "import bar" inside foo, it will work 
fine. By the time anything actually runs, both modules will be fully loaded and 
will have references to each other.

The problem is when instead you do "from foo import abc" and "from bar import 
xyz". Because now each module requires the other module to already be compiled 
(so that the name we are importing exists) before it can be compiled.

from
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/744373/circular-or-cyclic-imports-in-python
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