On 2015-08-10 11:11, Chris Angelico wrote:
On Sun, Aug 9, 2015 at 3:45 PM, Dwight GoldWinde <dwi...@goldwinde.com> wrote:
name = 'Jim'
coach = 'Dwight'
import importlib
sentence = 'Hi, there, ' + name + '. My name is ' + coach + '. I will be
your coach today.'
from Functions.py import humprint
humprint (sentence)

Traceback (most recent call last):

  File "Intro.py", line 5, in <module>

    from Functions.py import humprint

ImportError: No module named 'Functions.py'; 'Functions' is not a package



So, it seems like it is accessing the module, but not the function?

You're almost there! But in Python, you don't import something from a
specific file - you import from a module, and the Python interpreter
is free to locate that file anywhere that it can. It might be
implemented in C, and be stored in Functions.so (on Unix-like systems)
or Functions.dll (on Windows); it might be precompiled and loaded from
Functions.pyc; it might come from a zip file, or some other form of
special import source. So all you say is:

On Windows, the extension for Python extension DLLs is ".pyd".

from Functions import humprint

and Python does the rest. Yep, that's all the change you need, and
your code will most likely work. (I haven't tested it, but it'll
probably work.)


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