On Mon, Jun 02, 2014 at 01:21:29PM +0100, Sydney Shall wrote: > I am having a similar problem.
Actually, I don't think so. Your problem doesn't appear to have anything to do with the problem that Charles Agriesti is having. The only connection seems to be that you are both using Python. Read on for more details. > I have now worked out how to copy my helper file to the correct > location, in my case is: > '/Users/sydney/Library/Enthought/Canopy_64bit/User/lib/python2.7/site-packages' > > When I type the following at the IPython prompt I get no error message; > import findGraphParametersV2 Right. This says that, unlike Charles' situation, in your case Python is correctly importing your module. You may have a problem, but *importing* is not the problem. > And the following led me to believe all was well. > > I type in the following: > In [19]: dir(findGraphParametersV2) > > Out[19]: > ['__builtins__', '__doc__', '__file__', '__name__', '__package__', > 'findGraphParameters', 'np', 'pylab'] This shows that the findGraphParametersV2 (whew, that's a mouthful!) module has eight attributes. Some of them (like __name__) are created automatically by Python. Others, like np and pylab, are probably created when your module imports other modules. The one that you probably care about is findGraphParameters, which you need to call using: findGraphParametersV2.findGraphParameters( arguments ) Notice that you need to give the module name first, followed by the name of the thing inside the module. > However, when I use the import statement in my program I get a runtime > error as follows: Just a moment. A couple of sentences ago, you said that importing works. Now you say it doesn't. Which is it? Please be more specific about the code you are running. Unfortunately, while we know Python quite well, we're not very good at reading your mind, and we can't see your code. You need to identify what line of code is being run, and tell us. If the code is: import findGraphParametersV2 which then fails with ImportError, that tells us some valuable information. If the code is: result = findGraphParametersV2(some, arguments, here) which then fails with the error you mentioned: TypeError: 'module' object is not callable that tells us something completely different! Both the type of the exception (ImportError, TypeError) and the error message are important, but equally important is what you did that resulted in the error. > <ipython-input-14-abb1b897e8b9> in <module>() > ----> 1 CapitalSimulation(51, 4000.0, 20.0, 20.0, 100, 1.0, 0.0, 40.0, 1.0) > > /Users/sydney/My_Documents/Political_Economy/Capital_Simulation/Capital/Current > > version/CapitalWithProdV14.py in CapitalSimulation(number_of_cycles, > capital_advanced, unit_constant_capital, wagerate, labour_powers, > productivity, prodinc, work_duration, labour_intensity) If I am reading this correctly, this has absolutely nothing to do with the findGraphParametersV2 module or the findGraphParameters function inside that module. It looks to me like you have a *different* module, called CapitalSimulation, and you try to call it as if it were a function. It is difficult to tell exactly what is going on, but my guess is that inside the CapitalSimulation module you have a function *also* called CapitalSimulation. So in your module CapitalWithProdV14 (that's the THIRD module!!!) you probably have some code like: import CapitalSimulation # this is a module, not a function CapitalSimulation(number_of_cycles, capital_advanced, blah blah blah...) That second line is the problem. You need to change it to: CapitalSimulation.CapitalSimulation(number_of_cycles, ...) I think. Like I said, without understanding your code, it's difficult to be sure exactly what's going on. Reading between the lines, I feel that perhaps somebody has told you that you should have one class or one function per file. Or perhaps you have been reading Java programming books. Either way, it seems to me that you have an excess of modules and too many confusing imports. That way leads to frustration. I believe that you will be much better served to have *one* file per project, rather than splitting your project into a dozen itty bitty files. That way you don't need to care about importing your own modules, because everything is already inside the one file. If you *must* have separate files, never never never (well, almost never) give them the same name as the class or function inside them. A good convention is to name the module in all lower case, and the class in InitialCaps: # no, too confusing CapitalSimulation.CapitalSimulation(...) # better capital_simulation.CapitalSimulation(...) That way, you can tell at a glance which is the module and which is the class inside the module, and if you make a mistake, it will be more easily understood: capital_simulation(...) # wait a second, that's a module! [...] > I do not really understand what Steven is recommending below. > Is it an init statement in a file or is it an independent file. I don't believe this has anything to do with your problem, but for the record, there is no init statement in Python (although classes do have an __init__ method). I suggested to Charles that he add an empty __init__.py file inside his project folder. That would make it an separate file. Good luck! -- Steven _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor