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Found 10784 Articles for Python
![Rajendra Dharmkar](https://www.tutorialspoint.com/assets/profiles/9963/profile/60_124173-1512724240.jpg)
152 Views
Namespace is a way to implement scope. In Python, each package, module, class, function and method function owns a "namespace" in which variable names are resolved. When a function, module or package is evaluated (that is, starts execution), a namespace is created. Think of it as an "evaluation context". When a function, etc., finishes execution, the namespace is dropped. The variables are dropped. Plus there's a global namespace that's used if the name isn't in the local namespace.Each variable name is checked in the local namespace (the body of the function, the module, etc.), and then checked in the global ... Read More
![Sarika Singh](https://www.tutorialspoint.com/assets/profiles/502778/profile/60_2211036-1660719373.jpg)
82K+ Views
This article explains what the Python code expression if __name__ == '__main__' means. A Python programme uses the condition if __name__ == '__main__' to only run the code inside the if statement when the program is run directly by the Python interpreter. The code inside the if statement is not executed when the file's code is imported as a module. What is __main__? The word "__name__" denotes a unique variable in Python. Python has a large number of special variables that begin and end with double underscores. They are referred to as dunder to keep it brief (from Double Underscores). ... Read More
![Rajendra Dharmkar](https://www.tutorialspoint.com/assets/profiles/9963/profile/60_124173-1512724240.jpg)
161 Views
In Python, a namespace package allows you to spread Python code among several projects. This is useful when you want to release related libraries as separate downloads. For example, with the directories Package-1 and Package-2 in PYTHONPATH, Package-1/namespace/__init__.py Package-1/namespace/module1/__init__.py Package-2/namespace/__init__.py Package-2/namespace/module2/__init__.py the end-user can import namespace.module1 and import namespace.module2.On Python 3.3, you don't have to do anything, just don't put any __init__.py in your namespace package directories and it will just work. This is because Python 3.3 introduces implicit namespace packages.On older versions, there's a standard module, called pkgutil, with which you can 'append' modules to a given namespace. You ... Read More
![Rajendra Dharmkar](https://www.tutorialspoint.com/assets/profiles/9963/profile/60_124173-1512724240.jpg)
1K+ Views
You can use pip to install packages at runtime and importlib.import_module(moduleName) to import module by using its name as a string. For example,import pip import importlib def import_with_auto_install(package): try: return importlib.import_module(package) except ImportError: pip.main(['install', package]) return importlib.import_module(package) # Example if __name__ == '__main__': scrapy = import_with_auto_install('scrapy') print(scrapy)The above script installs the scrapy module and imports it when installation of the module completes.
5K+ Views
Easy Install is a python module that is bundled with setuptools (easy_install) that allows you to download, compile, install, and manage Python packages automatically. It was included in setuptools in 2004 and is now deprecated. It was remarkable at the time for automatically installing dependencies and installing packages from PyPI using requirement specifiers. Pip was released later in 2008 as a replacement for easy install, albeit it was still primarily based on setuptools components. Installing Python modules should be done with pip rather than easy install. You can use easy_install to install pip if you have it. The following line ... Read More
![Rajendra Dharmkar](https://www.tutorialspoint.com/assets/profiles/9963/profile/60_124173-1512724240.jpg)
921 Views
As of writing this, Python support for Azure Functions is experimental. So right now there is no way to directly get a module from a package manager to be installed on your instance. You'll need to bring your own modules with code. No modules are available by default on Azure Functions. You can add them by uploading it via the portal UX or kudu (which is handy for lots of files).If you don't mind using virtualenv, there is an alternative.Create your python script on Azure Functions.Open a Kudu console and cd to your script location.Create a virtualenv in this folder ... Read More
![Rajendra Dharmkar](https://www.tutorialspoint.com/assets/profiles/9963/profile/60_124173-1512724240.jpg)
765 Views
To check if you can import something in Python 2, you can use imp module with try...except. For example, import imp try: imp.find_module('eggs') found = True except ImportError: found = False print foundThis will give you the output:FalseYou can also use iter_modules from the pkgutil module to iterate over all modules to find if specified module exists. For example, from pkgutil import iter_modules def module_exists(module_name): return module_name in (name for loader, name, ispkg in iter_modules()) print module_exists('scrapy')This will give the output:TrueThis is because this module is installed on my PC.Or if you ... Read More
![Sarika Singh](https://www.tutorialspoint.com/assets/profiles/502778/profile/60_2211036-1660719373.jpg)
6K+ Views
The Python Standard Library is a collection of script modules that may be used by a Python program, making it unnecessary to rewrite frequently used commands and streamlining the development process. By "calling/importing" them at the start of a script, they can be used. A module is a file that contains Python code; an ‘coding.py’ file would be a module with the name ‘coding’.We utilise modules to divide complicated programmes into smaller, more manageable pieces. Modules also allow for the reuse of code. In the following example, a module called ‘coding’ contains a function called add() that we developed. The ... Read More
![Sarika Singh](https://www.tutorialspoint.com/assets/profiles/502778/profile/60_2211036-1660719373.jpg)
2K+ Views
Python does not have a data type for dates, but we may import the datetime module to work with dates as date objects. This article tells about how to display the current date by importing the datetime module. Using relativedelta() function The relativedelta type is intended to be applied to an existing datetime and can either indicate a period of time or replace specific elements of that datetime. Example The Python datetime module can be used to get the date six months from the current date. The code is shown below − from datetime import date from dateutil.relativedelta import relativedelta ... Read More
![Rajendra Dharmkar](https://www.tutorialspoint.com/assets/profiles/9963/profile/60_124173-1512724240.jpg)
159 Views
You can use "Sandboxed Python". A "Sandboxed Python" would let you permit or forbid modules, limit execution slices, permit or deny network traffic, constrain filesystem access to a particular directory (floated as "/"), and so on. It is also referred to as RestrictedExecution. There are many ways to implement sandboxing on Python. You could Modify the CPython Runtime, Use Another Runtime, Use Operating System Support, etc to implement such a sandbox. You can read more about sandboxing at: https://wiki.python.org/moin/SandboxedPythonPypi has a package called RestrictedPython(https://pypi.python.org/pypi/RestrictedPython) that is a defined subset of the Python language which allows to provide a program input ... Read More