I'm not experienced about python, so if there is any wrong in my words, just tell me. If your file hierarchy arranged like this:
project\
module_1.py
module_2.py
module_1.py defines a function called func_1(), module_2.py:
from module_1 import func_1
def func_2():
func_1()
if __name__ == '__main__':
func_2()
and you run python module_2.py in cmd, it will do run what func_1() defines. That's usually how we import same hierarchy files. But when you write from .module_1 import func_1 in module_2.py, python interpreter will say No module named '__main__.module_1'; '__main__' is not a package. So to fix this, we just keep the change we just make, and move both of the module to a package, and make a third module as a caller to run module_2.py.
project\
package_1\
module_1.py
module_2.py
main.py
main.py:
from package_1.module_2 import func_2
def func_3():
func_2()
if __name__ == '__main__':
func_3()
But the reason we add a . before module_1 in module_2.py is that if we don't do that and run main.py, python interpreter will say No module named 'module_1', that's a little tricky, module_1.py is right beside module_2.py. Now I let func_1() in module_1.py do something:
def func_1():
print(__name__)
that __name__ records who calls func_1. Now we keep the . before module_1 , run main.py, it will print package_1.module_1, not module_1. It indicates that the one who calls func_1() is at the same hierarchy as main.py, the . imply that module_1 is at the same hierarchy as module_2.py itself. So if there isn't a dot, main.py will recognize module_1 at the same hierarchy as itself, it can recognize package_1, but not what "under" it.
Now let's make it a bit complicated. You have a config.ini and a module defines a function to read it at the same hierarchy as 'main.py'.
project\
package_1\
module_1.py
module_2.py
config.py
config.ini
main.py
And for some unavoidable reason, you have to call it with module_2.py, so it has to import from upper hierarchy.module_2.py:
import ..config
pass
Two dots means import from upper hierarchy (three dots access upper than upper,and so on). Now we run main.py, the interpreter will say:ValueError:attempted relative import beyond top-level package. The "top-level package" at here is main.py. Just because config.py is beside main.py, they are at same hierarchy, config.py isn't "under" main.py, or it isn't "leaded" by main.py, so it is beyond main.py. To fix this, the simplest way is:
project\
package_1\
module_1.py
module_2.py
config.py
config.ini
main.py
I think that is coincide with the principle of arrange project file hierarchy, you should arrange modules with different function in different folders, and just leave a top caller in the outside, and you can import how ever you want.