Proper way to reload a python module from the console
For python3.4+, reload has been moved to the importlib
module. you can use importlib.reload()
. You can refer to this post.
>>> import importlib
>>> import project # get module reference for reload
>>> importlib.reload(project.models.user) # reload step 1
>>> from project.models.user import * # reload step 2
For python3
versions before 3.4
, the module to import is imp
(instead of importlib
)
As asked, the best you can do is
>>> from project.models.user import *
>>> import project # get module reference for reload
>>> reload(project.models.user) # reload step 1
>>> from project.models.user import * # reload step 2
it would be better and cleaner if you used the user module directly, rather than doing import *
(which is almost never the right way to do it). Then it would just be
>>> from project.models import user
>>> reload(user)
This would do what you want. But, it's not very nice. If you really need to reload modules so often, I've got to ask: why?
My suspicion (backed up by previous experience with people asking similar questions) is that you're testing your module. There are lots of ways to test a module out, and doing it by hand in the interactive interpreter is among the worst ways. Save one of your sessions to a file and use doctest
, for a quick fix. Alternatively, write it out as a program and use python -i
. The only really great solution, though, is using the unittest
module.
If that's not it, hopefully it's something better, not worse. There's really no good use of reload
(in fact, it's removed in 3.x). It doesn't work effectively-- you might reload a module but leave leftovers from previous versions. It doesn't even work on all kinds of modules-- extension modules will not reload properly, or sometimes even break horribly, when reloaded.
The context of using it in the interactive interpreter doesn't leave a lot of choices as to what you are doing, and what the real best solution would be. Outside it, sometimes people used reload()
to implement plugins etc. This is dangerous at best, and can frequently be done differently using either exec
(ah the evil territory we find ourselves in), or a segregated process.
IPython can reload modules before executing every new line:
%load_ext autoreload
%autoreload 2
Where %autoreload 2
reloads "all modules (except those excluded by %aimport) every time before executing the Python code typed."
See the docs:
- https://ipython.org/ipython-doc/3/config/extensions/autoreload.html
You can't use reload() in a effective way.
Python does not provide an effective support for reloading or unloading of previously imported modules; module references makes it impractical to reload a module because references could exist in many places of your program.
Python 3 has removed reload() feature entirely.