Grouping Functions by Using Classes in Python

Another approach is to make a util package and split up your functions into different modules within that package. The basics of packages: make a directory (whose name will be the package name) and put a special file in it, the __init__.py file. This can contain code, but for the basic package organization, it can be an empty file.

my_package/
  __init__.py
  module1.py/
  modle2.py/
  ...
  module3.py

So say you are in your working directory:

mkdir util
touch util/__init__.py

Then inside your util directory, make calc_funcs.py

def add(a,b):
    return a + b

def sub(a,b):
    return a -b

And format_funcs.py:

def cap(string):
    return string.title()

def lower(string):
    return string.lower()

And now, from your working directory, you can do things like the following:

>>> from util import calc_funcs
>>> calc_funcs.add(1,3)
4
>>> from util.format_funcs import cap
>>> cap("the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog")
'The Quick Brown Fox Jumped Over The Lazy Dog'

Edited to add

Notice, though, if we restart the interpreter session:

>>> import util
>>> util.format_funcs.cap("i should've been a book")
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: module 'util' has no attribute 'format_funcs'

This is what the __init__.py is for!

In __init__.py, add the following:

import util.calc_funcs, util.format_funcs

Now, restart the interpreter again:

>>> import util
>>> util.calc_funcs.add('1','2')
'12'
>>> util.format_funcs.lower("I DON'T KNOW WHAT I'M YELLING ABOUT")
"i don't know what i'm yelling about"

Yay! We have flexible control over our namespaces with easy importing! Basically, the __init__.py plays an analogous role to the __init__ method in a class definition.

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