GJ.
GJ.

Reputation: 5364

Using newly installed modules without restarting an interactive session

During a long interactive session (using ipython) I sometimes need to use a module which I don't already have installed.

After installing the new module, that module becomes importable in new interactive sessions, but not in the session that was running before the installation. I wouldn't want to restart the session due to all of the variables in memory that I'm working with...

How can I get such a previously running session to import the new module?

Upvotes: 16

Views: 7845

Answers (2)

idbrii
idbrii

Reputation: 11916

Here's a slightly simpler answer for top-level modules in python3:

# import it to use it
import modulename

# reimport it with importlib
import importlib
print(importlib.reload(__import__("modulename")))

Worked for me on python 3.9. I think it only reimports the top-level module, so you'd want the SourceFileLoader solution for child modules.

Upvotes: 0

Torxed
Torxed

Reputation: 23480

There's two ways of manually importing things in Python (depending on your python version).

# Python2
import os
os.chdir('/path')
handle = __import__('scriptname') #without .py
handle.func()

Or you can do:

# Python3.3+
import importlib.machinery
loader = importlib.machinery.SourceFileLoader("namespace", '/path/scriptname.py') #including .py
handle = loader.load_module("namespace")
handle.func()

This works a bit differently in previous version of Python3, Don't have the time or access to install older versions now but I do remember hitting a few issues when trying to import and especially reload modules in earlier versions.


To reload these modules in case they change (just to elaborate this answer):

# Python2
reload(handle)


# Python3
import imp
imp.reload(handle)

Upvotes: 5

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