I'm learning Python and I have been playing around with packages. I wanted to know the best way to define classes in packages. It seems that the only way to define classes in a package is to define them in the __init__.py
of that package. Coming from Java, I'd kind of like to define individual files for my classes. Is this a recommended practice?
I'd like to have my directory look somewhat like this:
recursor/
__init__.py
RecursionException.py
RecursionResult.py
Recursor.py
So I could refer to my classes as recursor.Recursor
, recursor.RecursionException
, and recursor.RecursionResult
. Is this doable or recommended in Python?
Go ahead and define your classes in separate modules. Then make
__init__.py
do something like this:That will import each class into the package's root namespace, so calling code can refer to
recursor.Recursor
instead ofrecursor.Recursor.Recursor
.I feel the need to echo some of the other comments here, though: Python is not Java. Rather than creating a new module for every class under the sun, I suggest grouping closely related classes into a single module. It's easier to understand your code that way, and calling code won't need a bazillion imports.
This is perfectly doable. Just create a new class module for each of those classes, and create exactly the structure you posted.
You can also make a Recursion.py module or something similar, and include all 3 classes in that file.
(I'm also new to Python from Java, and I haven't yet put anything in my
__init__.py
files...)In Python you're not restricted to defining 1 class per file and few do that. You can if you want to though - it's totally up to you. A Package in Python is just a directory with an
file. You don't have to put anything in that file you can to control what gets imported etc.