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Should `import` statements always at the top?Programming Language/Python3 2021. 10. 25. 18:05
why import statement always at the top of code?
이 글은 스택오버플로우의 글을 가져온 것이다.
Question
PEP 8 states:
Imports are always put at the top of the file, just after any module comments and docstrings, and before module globals and constants.
However if the class/method/function that I am importing is only used in rare cases, surely it is more efficient to do the import when it is needed?
Isn't this:
class SomeClass(object): def not_often_called(self) from datetime import datetime # here self.datetime = datetime.now()
more efficient than this?
from datetime import datetime # here class SomeClass(object): def not_often_called(self) self.datetime = datetime.now()
Answer
Module importing is quite fast, but not instant. This means that:
- Putting the imports at the top of the module is fine, because it's a trivial cost that's only paid once.
- Putting the imports within a function will cause calls to that function to take longer.
So if you care about efficiency, put the imports at the top. Only move them into a function if your profiling shows that would help (you did profile to see where best to improve performance, right??)
The best reasons I've seen to perform lazy imports are:
- Optional library support. If your code has multiple paths that use different libraries, don't break if an optional library is not installed.
- In the
__init__.py
of a plugin, which might be imported but not actually used. Examples are Bazaar plugins, which usebzrlib
's lazy-loading framework.
결론
- 최상단에 위치하면, 모듈의 전역으로 임포트되고, 임포트되는 비용을 1회만 지출할 수 있다.
- 최상단에서 임포트하지 않는 것을 lazy import 라고 부르는 모양.
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