Trying to import module with the same name as a built-in module causes an import error

Cory picture Cory · Aug 3, 2009 · Viewed 32.6k times · Source

I have a module that conflicts with a built-in module. For example, a myapp.email module defined in myapp/email.py.

I can reference myapp.email anywhere in my code without issue. However, I need to reference the built-in email module from my email module.

# myapp/email.py
from email import message_from_string

It only finds itself, and therefore raises an ImportError, since myapp.email doesn't have a message_from_string method. import email causes the same issue when I try email.message_from_string.

Is there any native support to do this in Python, or am I stuck with renaming my "email" module to something more specific?

Answer

Greg Hewgill picture Greg Hewgill · Aug 3, 2009

You will want to read about Absolute and Relative Imports which addresses this very problem. Use:

from __future__ import absolute_import

Using that, any unadorned package name will always refer to the top level package. You will then need to use relative imports (from .email import ...) to access your own package.

NOTE: The above from ... line needs to be put into any 2.x Python .py files above the import ... lines you're using. In Python 3.x this is the default behavior and so is no longer needed.