shawn bright wrote: > Hello there, > > a while back i wrote a module called DbConnector.py that allowed me to run > different types of SQL queries. Cool enough. > i did it mostly to handle the open and close of a db connection so i > wouldn't have to worry about 'too many connection' errors. > it makes a connection, runs a query, then closes the connection. > The reason i write this, is that i know how the module works to make a > connection 'object' > now, i have a few functions in some scripts that i would like to reuse > across the board. But, they dont really fit the "object" thing, i dont > thing. Basically, i have a bunch of functions that do different things > and i > would like one script to hold them all. > do i need to define a class for this, or can you import a function from > another script ? > > like if i have > > def write_something_to_log(logfile, something) > f = open(logfile, 'a') > f.write('%s\n' % something) > f.close() > return 'success' > > and i wanted to use this same function in about four different scripts, > do i > need a class ? Do i need to just create a script full of common functions > that i can access ? and if so, how ? > usually in the tutorials i read, they deal with OO and classes. Most > commonly a class called Person. Then person has different attributes. But > these functions are just bits of code that i want to reuse > what is the cleanest way to do something like this ? > > thanks > > sk
If your function write_something_to_log is in file myfunctions.py you can just do: from myfunctions import write_something_to_log and then use write_something_to_log() just like it was defined in that file. Example: #file: test1.py def spam(): print "Spam, eggs, and toast" #file: myscript.py from test1 import spam spam() #prints "Spam, eggs, and toast" Hope this helps! -Jordan Greenberg _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor