set pythonpath before import statements

DKG picture DKG · Feb 27, 2013 · Viewed 134.8k times · Source

My code is:

import scriptlib.abc
import scriptlib.xyz

def foo():
  ... some operations

but the scriptlib is in some other directory, so I will have to include that directory in environment variable "PYTHONPATH".

Is there anyway in which I can first add the scriptlib directory in environment variable "PYTHONPATH" before import statement getting executed like :

import sys
sys.path.append('/mypath/scriptlib')
import scriptlib.abc
import scriptlib.xyz

def foo():
  ... some operations

If so, is the value only for that command prompt or is it global ?

Thanks in advance

Answer

Joe picture Joe · Feb 27, 2013

This will add a path to your Python process / instance (i.e. the running executable). The path will not be modified for any other Python processes. Another running Python program will not have its path modified, and if you exit your program and run again the path will not include what you added before. What are you are doing is generally correct.

set.py:

import sys
sys.path.append("/tmp/TEST")

loop.py

import sys
import time
while True:
  print sys.path
  time.sleep(1)

run: python loop.py &

This will run loop.py, connected to your STDOUT, and it will continue to run in the background. You can then run python set.py. Each has a different set of environment variables. Observe that the output from loop.py does not change because set.py does not change loop.py's environment.

A note on importing

Python imports are dynamic, like the rest of the language. There is no static linking going on. The import is an executable line, just like sys.path.append....