I have a directory full of scripts (let's say project/bin
). I also have a library located in project/lib
and want the scripts to automatically load it. This is what I normally use at the top of each script:
#!/usr/bin/python
from os.path import dirname, realpath, sep, pardir
import sys
sys.path.append(dirname(realpath(__file__)) + sep + pardir + sep + "lib")
# ... now the real code
import mylib
This is kind of cumbersome, ugly, and has to be pasted at the beginning of every file. Is there a better way to do this?
Really what I'm hoping for is something as smooth as this:
#!/usr/bin/python
import sys.path
from os.path import pardir, sep
sys.path.append_relative(pardir + sep + "lib")
import mylib
Or even better, something that wouldn't break when my editor (or someone else who has commit access) decides to reorder the imports as part of its clean-up process:
#!/usr/bin/python --relpath_append ../lib
import mylib
That wouldn't port directly to non-posix platforms, but it would keep things clean.
If you don't want to edit each file
PYTHONPATH
to your lib
or if you are willing to add a single line to each file, add a import statement at top e.g.
import import_my_lib
keep import_my_lib.py
in bin and import_my_lib
can correctly set the python path to whatever lib
you want