Importing from a relative path in Python

Drew picture Drew · Sep 21, 2011 · Viewed 150.9k times · Source

I have a folder for my client code, a folder for my server code, and a folder for code that is shared between them

Proj/
    Client/
        Client.py
    Server/
        Server.py
    Common/
        __init__.py
        Common.py

How do I import Common.py from Server.py and Client.py?

Answer

Dave picture Dave · Sep 21, 2011

EDIT Nov 2014 (3 years later):

Python 2.6 and 3.x supports proper relative imports, where you can avoid doing anything hacky. With this method, you know you are getting a relative import rather than an absolute import. The '..' means, go to the directory above me:

from ..Common import Common

As a caveat, this will only work if you run your python as a module, from outside of the package. For example:

python -m Proj

Original hacky way

This method is still commonly used in some situations, where you aren't actually ever 'installing' your package. For example, it's popular with Django users.

You can add Common/ to your sys.path (the list of paths python looks at to import things):

import sys, os
sys.path.append(os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), '..', 'Common'))
import Common

os.path.dirname(__file__) just gives you the directory that your current python file is in, and then we navigate to 'Common/' the directory and import 'Common' the module.