As part of my build system, I am using a modified version of a Python package (cogapp). I don't want to install the package because:
- I've modified the package and don't want to worry about collision with unmodified versions which may already be installed.
- It's nicer if the users of the build system don't need to install extra packages.
However, I'm having problems with using the package if it's not installed. If it is installed, I can run:
python -m cogapp <additional args>
and everything runs as intended.
The package has a __main__.py script:
import sys
from cogapp import Cog
sys.exit(Cog().main(sys.argv))
I tried running this directly, e.g.:
python -m <path>/__main__ <additional_args>
But I get the error:
...
/__main__.py", line 3, in <module>
from cogapp import Cog
ImportError: No module named cogapp
This is probably related to the error I get if I run __init__.py:
from .cogapp import *
The error is:
from .cogapp import *
ValueError: Attempted relative import in non-package
How can I run the package as a package?
EDIT:
I found a fix by removing all the relative imports from cogapp, and removing the -m, i.e. not running as a module. In this instance it's not too bad because it's a small package with only a single directory. However I'm interested in how this should be done in future. There's lots of stuff written around this subject, but no clear answers!