How to dynamically load a Python class

PythonReflectionPython Import

Python Problem Overview


Given a string of a Python class, e.g. my_package.my_module.MyClass, what is the best possible way to load it?

In other words I am looking for a equivalent Class.forName() in Java, function in Python. It needs to work on Google App Engine.

Preferably this would be a function that accepts the FQN of the class as a string, and returns a reference to the class:

my_class = load_class('my_package.my_module.MyClass')
my_instance = my_class()

Python Solutions


Solution 1 - Python

From the python documentation, here's the function you want:

def my_import(name):
    components = name.split('.')
    mod = __import__(components[0])
    for comp in components[1:]:
        mod = getattr(mod, comp)
    return mod

The reason a simple __import__ won't work is because any import of anything past the first dot in a package string is an attribute of the module you're importing. Thus, something like this won't work:

__import__('foo.bar.baz.qux')

You'd have to call the above function like so:

my_import('foo.bar.baz.qux')

Or in the case of your example:

klass = my_import('my_package.my_module.my_class')
some_object = klass()

EDIT: I was a bit off on this. What you're basically wanting to do is this:

from my_package.my_module import my_class

The above function is only necessary if you have a empty fromlist. Thus, the appropriate call would be like this:

mod = __import__('my_package.my_module', fromlist=['my_class'])
klass = getattr(mod, 'my_class')

Solution 2 - Python

If you don't want to roll your own, there is a function available in the pydoc module that does exactly this:

from pydoc import locate
my_class = locate('my_package.my_module.MyClass')

The advantage of this approach over the others listed here is that locate will find any python object at the provided dotted path, not just an object directly within a module. e.g. my_package.my_module.MyClass.attr.

If you're curious what their recipe is, here's the function:

def locate(path, forceload=0):
    """Locate an object by name or dotted path, importing as necessary."""
    parts = [part for part in split(path, '.') if part]
    module, n = None, 0
    while n < len(parts):
        nextmodule = safeimport(join(parts[:n+1], '.'), forceload)
        if nextmodule: module, n = nextmodule, n + 1
        else: break
    if module:
        object = module
    else:
        object = __builtin__
    for part in parts[n:]:
        try:
            object = getattr(object, part)
        except AttributeError:
            return None
    return object

It relies on pydoc.safeimport function. Here are the docs for that:

"""Import a module; handle errors; return None if the module isn't found.

If the module *is* found but an exception occurs, it's wrapped in an
ErrorDuringImport exception and reraised.  Unlike __import__, if a
package path is specified, the module at the end of the path is returned,
not the package at the beginning.  If the optional 'forceload' argument
is 1, we reload the module from disk (unless it's a dynamic extension)."""

Solution 3 - Python

import importlib

module = importlib.import_module('my_package.my_module')
my_class = getattr(module, 'MyClass')
my_instance = my_class()

Solution 4 - Python

If you're using Django you can use import_string.

Yes i'm aware OP did not ask for django, but i ran across this question looking for a Django solution, didn't find one, and put it here for the next boy/gal that looks for it.

# It's available for v1.7+
# https://github.com/django/django/blob/stable/1.7.x/django/utils/module_loading.py
from django.utils.module_loading import import_string

Klass = import_string('path.to.module.Klass')
func = import_string('path.to.module.func')
var = import_string('path.to.module.var')

Keep in mind, if you want to import something that doesn't have a ., like re or argparse use:

re = __import__('re')

Solution 5 - Python

def import_class(cl):
	d = cl.rfind(".")
	classname = cl[d+1:len(cl)]
	m = __import__(cl[0:d], globals(), locals(), [classname])
	return getattr(m, classname)

Solution 6 - Python

Here is to share something I found on __import__ and importlib while trying to solve this problem.

I am using Python 3.7.3.

When I try to get to the class d in module a.b.c,

mod = __import__('a.b.c')

The mod variable refer to the top namespace a.

So to get to the class d, I need to

mod = getattr(mod, 'b') #mod is now module b
mod = getattr(mod, 'c') #mod is now module c
mod = getattr(mod, 'd') #mod is now class d

If we try to do

mod = __import__('a.b.c')
d = getattr(mod, 'd')

we are actually trying to look for a.d.

When using importlib, I suppose the library has done the recursive getattr for us. So, when we use importlib.import_module, we actually get a handle on the deepest module.

mod = importlib.import_module('a.b.c') #mod is module c
d = getattr(mod, 'd') #this is a.b.c.d

Solution 7 - Python

If you happen to already have an instance of your desired class, you can use the 'type' function to extract its class type and use this to construct a new instance:

class Something(object):
    def __init__(self, name):
        self.name = name
    def display(self):
        print(self.name)

one = Something("one")
one.display()
cls = type(one)
two = cls("two")
two.display()

Solution 8 - Python

OK, for me that is the way it worked (I am using Python 2.7):

a = __import__('file_to_import', globals(), locals(), ['*'], -1)
b = a.MyClass()

Then, b is an instance of class 'MyClass'

Solution 9 - Python

Python has an inbuilt library importlib to get the job done. :, How to access module method and class method dynamically bypassing package name as a param. An example is given below.

Module 1:

def get_scenario_data():
    return "module1 scenario data"


class Module1:

    def module1_function1(self):
        return "module1_function"

    def module1_function2(self):
        return "module2_function"

Module 2:

def get_scenario_data():
    return "module2 scenario data"



class Module2:

    def module2_function1(self):
        return "module2_function1"

    def module2_function2(self):
        return "module2_function2"

ModuleTest:

  1. Will access the module methods dynamically based on the package name as param
  2. Will access the class methods dynamically based on the package name as param.

ModuleTest

import importlib

module = importlib.import_module('pack1.nestedpack1.module1')
print(module.get_scenario_data())
modul1_cls_obj = getattr(module, 'Module1')()
print(modul1_cls_obj.module1_function1())
print(modul1_cls_obj.module1_function2())

module = importlib.import_module('pack1.nestedpack1.module2')
modul2_cls_obj = getattr(module, 'Module2')()
print(modul2_cls_obj.module2_function1())
print(modul2_cls_obj.module2_function2())
print(module.get_scenario_data())

Results

module1 scenario data
module1_function
module2_function
module2_function1
module2_function2
module2 scenario data

Solution 10 - Python

In Google App Engine there is a webapp2 function called import_string. For more info see here:https://webapp-improved.appspot.com/api/webapp2.html

So,

import webapp2
my_class = webapp2.import_string('my_package.my_module.MyClass')

For example this is used in the webapp2.Route where you can either use a handler or a string.

Solution 11 - Python

module = __import__("my_package/my_module")
the_class = getattr(module, "MyClass")
obj = the_class()

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