from foo import *
adds all the names without leading underscores (or only the names defined in the modules __all__
attribute) in foo
into your current module.
In the above code with from socket import *
you just want to catch timeout
as you’ve pulled timeout
into your current namespace.
from socket import *
pulls in the definitions of everything inside of socket
but doesn’t add socket
itself.
try: # socketstuff except timeout: print 'caught a timeout'
Many people consider import *
problematic and try to avoid it. This is because common variable names in 2 or more modules that are imported in this way will clobber one another.
For example, consider the following three python files:
# a.py def foo(): print "this is a's foo function" # b.py def foo(): print "this is b's foo function" # yourcode.py from a import * from b import * foo()
If you run yourcode.py
you’ll see just the output “this is b’s foo function”.
For this reason I’d suggest either importing the module and using it or importing specific names from the module:
For example, your code would look like this with explicit imports:
import socket from socket import AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM def main(): client_socket = socket.socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM) client_socket.settimeout(1) server_host = 'localhost' server_port = 1234 while(True): client_socket.sendto('Message', (server_host, server_port)) try: reply, server_address_info = client_socket.recvfrom(1024) print reply except socket.timeout: #more code
Just a tiny bit more typing but everything’s explicit and it’s pretty obvious to the reader where everything comes from.