Question #267396 on Sikuli changed: https://answers.launchpad.net/sikuli/+question/267396
Status: Open => Answered RaiMan proposed the following answer: what you are doing, is not really the intended use of import. A script, intended to be imported should consist of at least some functions, that can be called by the importing script using retval = module.function() if the function ends with a return number then you will have that in your main script in retval then. To change your code do the following: # the sub module (e.g. mySubModule.sikuli) from sikuli import * def run(): click("1431123550795.png") click("Screen Shot 2015-04-28 at 11.50.04 AM.png") click("1418422585290.png") click("1418422597111.png") wait(3) click("1418422611695.png") wait(5) click("1418422621054.png") return 1 and in the main module you have import mySubModule # … some code retval = mySubModule.run() This is the way how one should use the import. Be aware: the code you currently have in your sub script is only executed once in a Sikuli session at time of import (indent- level-0-code) With the "real" import solution, at time of import only the function is accepted as defined and nothing else happens. the code in the function run is executed each time you use mySubModule.run() But if you want to stay with your solution of indent-level-0-code, then you have another option now (use the latest build please): http://sikulix-2014.readthedocs.org/en/latest/scripting.html#running-scripts-and-snippets-from-within-other-scripts-and-run-scripts-one-after-the-other -- You received this question notification because you are a member of Sikuli Drivers, which is an answer contact for Sikuli. _______________________________________________ Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~sikuli-driver Post to : sikuli-driver@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~sikuli-driver More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp