Thank You...both solutions are working perfectly fine!!! On 24 Nov., 16:09, Chad Dombrova <[email protected]> wrote: > here's a simple method: > > import pydoc > for f in functionArray = > ['modulename.saySomething','package.modulename.saySomethingElse']: > func = pydoc.locate(f) > func() > > the name that you pass to pydoc.locate should be the full dotted path to the > function (including the module name). the module must be on sys.path. > > if, in your example, myscript is a module *object* and not just a module > *name*, then this should also work: > > myscript = sourceScript.importPath("Z:/python/myScript.py") > for f in functionArray = ['saySomething','saySomethingElse']: > func = getattr(myscript, f) > func() > > -chad > > On Nov 24, 2009, at 6:50 AM, Daniel wrote: > > > > > Hello, > > > is there a way to append a string that represents a function to a > > module and then evaluate the whole thing? i got a python importer > > class that sets the pythonPath for the specified script and returns > > the name of the module like so. > > > myscript = sourceScript.importPath("Z:/python/myScript.py") > > > Now if i call myScript.saySomething() by hand it can execute the > > function in myScript. The problem is: i have an array representing all > > the functions that i want to map to a menu like so: functionArray = > > (['saySomething()','saySomethingElse()']) . is there a way to cast a > > string to a function like > > > myscript.(castToFunctionType)functionArray[0] > > > similar to str(3)? > > > thanks... > > > -- > >http://groups.google.com/group/python_inside_maya- Zitierten Text ausblenden > >- > > - Zitierten Text anzeigen -
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