An example of python package

Overview

An example of python package

Why use packages?

It is a good practice to not code the same function twice, and to reuse common code from one python script to the other.

To import the function some_function defined in some_file.py, you can do:

from some_file import some_function

but this only works if you run your code in the same folder as some_file.py. If you want to make some_function accessible from anywhere on your computer, you should not use

import sys
sys.path.append("the/path/to/some_file.py")

because when you share your code with other people, this breaks most of the time.

Instead, you should create a python package containing the code you need. The following shows how to do it.

Package structure

This repository contains a basic python package, named my_package. Its structure is as follows:

example_package   (the main directory/folder)
├── my_package  (code folder, must have the name of the module)
│   └── __init__.py   (a special Python file, is executed whenever you import my_package)
|   └── utils.py   (a regular Python file in which you define functions, variables, classes, etc)
├── setup.py  (this special file must be executed to install the package)
└── README.md   (contains what you are currently reading)

The mandatory files, which must have exactly this name, are setup.py and my_package/__init__.py. On the other hand, note that:

  • utils.py could have an arbitrary other name
  • README.md is not necessary for a package, and is used here to give information to the people browsing the Github repository

Package installation

Once you have the files defined above, you should open a terminal, move to where the setup.py file is (using the cd command), then execute pip install -e .

After that, from any location on your computer you can open an ipython terminal and run:

import my_package
from my_package import my_function
my_function()
# etc, just like when you do: from pandas import read_csv

How does it work?

Running pip install -e . tells python to remember where it should look when you refer to my_pakage in some code. Whenever you run import my_package, it will go to this location, and run the __init__.py. Inside the __init__.py, you have imported or defined some variables (functions, classes, constants, etc), that are now usable in your main script.

More advanced

Submodules

When you do:

from sklearn.linear_model import Lasso

you are using the submodule linear_model of sklearn. When you codebase grows, splitting it into submodules is nice to keep your code organized (for example, all code related to Linear Models go into the linear_model submodule; preprocessing go into sklearn.preprocessing, etc).

in simple terms, a submodule is a package defined inside a package (meaning it also has its own `init.py), using this folder structure:

example_package
├── my_package
    └── __init__.py
    └── my_submodule
        └── __init__.py

usually, the __init__.py file import variables defined in other files inside the my_submodule folder (not shown here for simplicity).

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