__main__ — Top-level code environment¶
In Python, the special name __main__ is used for two important constructs:
the name of the top-level environment of the program, which can be checked using the
__name__ == '__main__'expression; andthe
__main__.pyfile in Python packages.
Both of these mechanisms are related to Python modules; how users interact with them and how they interact with each other. They are explained in detail below. If you’re new to Python modules, see the tutorial section Modules for an introduction.
__name__ == '__main__'¶
When a Python module or package is imported, __name__ is set to the
module’s name. Usually, this is the name of the Python file itself without the
.py extension:
>>> import configparser
>>> configparser.__name__
'configparser'
If the file is part of a package, __name__ will also include the parent
package’s path:
>>> from concurrent.futures import process
>>> process.__name__
'concurrent.futures.process'
However, if the module is executed in the top-level code environment,
its __name__ is set to the string '__main__'.
What is the “top-level code environment”?¶
__main__ is the name of the environment where top-level code is run.
“Top-level code” is the first user-specified Python module that starts running.
It’s “top-level” because it imports all other modules that the program needs.
Sometimes “top-level code” is called an entry point to the application.
The top-level code environment can be:
the scope of an interactive prompt:
>>> __name__ '__main__'
the Python module passed to the Python interpreter as a file argument:
$ python3 helloworld.py Hello, world!
the Python module or package passed to the Python interpreter with the
-margument:$ python3 -m tarfile usage: tarfile.py [-h] [-v] (...)
Python code read by the Python interpreter from standard input:
$ echo "import this" | python3 The Zen of Python, by Tim Peters Beautiful is better than ugly. Explicit is better than implicit. ...
Python code passed to the Python interpreter with the
-cargument:$ python3 -c "import this" The Zen of Python, by Tim Peters Beautiful is better than ugly. Explicit is better than implicit. ...
In each of these situations, the top-level module’s
__name__is set to'__main__'.As a result, a module can discover whether or not it is running in the top-level environment by checking its own
__name__, which allows a common idiom for conditionally executing code when the module is not initialized from an import statement:if __name__ == '__main__': # Execute when the module is not initialized from an import statement. ...
See also
For a more detailed look at how
__name__is set in all situations, see the tutorial section Modules.Idiomatic Usage¶
Some modules contain code that is intended for script use only, like parsing command-line arguments or fetching data from standard input. If a module like this was imported from a different module, for example to unit test it, the script code would unintentionally execute as well.
This is where using the
if __name__ == '__main__'code block comes in handy. Code within this block won’t run unless the module is executed in the top-level environment.Putting as few statements as possible in the block below
if __name___ == '__main__'can improve code clarity and correctness. Most often, a function namedmainencapsulates the program’s primary behavior:# echo.py import shlex import sys def echo(phrase: str) -> None: """A dummy wrapper around print.""" # for demonstration purposes, you can imagine that there is some # valuable and reusable logic inside this function print(phrase) def main() -> int: """Echo the input arguments to standard output""" phrase = shlex.join(sys.argv) echo(phrase) return 0 if __name__ == '__main__': sys.exit(main()) # next section explains the use of sys.exit
Note that if the module didn’t encapsulate code inside the
mainfunction but instead put it directly within theif __name__ == '__main__'block, thephrasevariable would be global to the entire module. This is error-prone as other functions within the module could be unintentionally using the global variable instead of a local name. Amainfunction solves this problem.Using a
mainfunction has the added benefit of theechofunction itself being isolated and importable elsewhere. Whenecho.pyis imported, theechoandmainfunctions will be defined, but neither of them will be called, because__name__ != '__main__'.Packaging Considerations¶
mainfunctions are often used to create command-line tools by specifying them as entry points for console scripts. When this is done, pip inserts the function call into a template script, where the return value ofmainis passed intosys.exit(). For example:sys.exit(main())
Since the call to
mainis wrapped insys.exit(), the expectation is that your function will return some value acceptable as an input tosys.exit(); typically, an integer orNone(which is implicitly returned if your function does not have a return statement).By proactively following this convention ourselves, our module will have the same behavior when run directly (i.e.
python3 echo.py) as it will have if we later package it as a console script entry-point in a pip-installable package.In particular, be careful about returning strings from your
mainfunction.sys.exit()will interpret a string argument as a failure message, so your program will have an exit code of1, indicating failure, and the string will be written tosys.stderr. Theecho.pyexample from earlier exemplifies using thesys.exit(main())convention.See also
Python Packaging User Guide contains a collection of tutorials and references on how to distribute and install Python packages with modern tools.
__main__.pyin Python Packages¶If you are not familiar with Python packages, see section Packages of the tutorial. Most commonly, the
__main__.pyfile is used to provide a command-line interface for a package. Consider the following hypothetical package, “bandclass”:bandclass ├── __init__.py ├── __main__.py └── student.py
__main__.pywill be executed when the package itself is invoked directly from the command line using the-mflag. For example:$ python3 -m bandclass
This command will cause
__main__.pyto run. How you utilize this mechanism will depend on the nature of the package you are writing, but in this hypothetical case, it might make sense to allow the teacher to search for students:# bandclass/__main__.py import sys from .student import search_students student_name = sys.argv[2] if len(sys.argv) >= 2 else '' print(f'Found student: {search_students(student_name)}')
Note that
from .student import search_studentsis an example of a relative import. This import style can be used when referencing modules within a package. For more details, see Intra-package References in the Modules section of the tutorial.Idiomatic Usage¶
The contents of
__main__.pytypically isn’t fenced withif __name__ == '__main__'blocks. Instead, those files are kept short, functions to execute from other modules. Those other modules can then be easily unit-tested and are properly reusable.If used, an
if __name__ == '__main__'block will still work as expected for a__main__.pyfile within a package, because its__name__attribute will include the package’s path if imported:>>> import asyncio.__main__ >>> asyncio.__main__.__name__ 'asyncio.__main__'
This won’t work for
__main__.pyfiles in the root directory of a .zip file though. Hence, for consistency, minimal__main__.pylike thevenvone mentioned below are preferred.See also
See
venvfor an example of a package with a minimal__main__.pyin the standard library. It doesn’t contain aif __name__ == '__main__'block. You can invoke it withpython -m venv [directory].See
runpyfor more details on the-mflag to the interpreter executable.See
zipappfor how to run applications packaged as .zip files. In this case Python looks for a__main__.pyfile in the root directory of the archive.import __main__¶Regardless of which module a Python program was started with, other modules running within that same program can import the top-level environment’s scope (namespace) by importing the
__main__module. This doesn’t import a__main__.pyfile but rather whichever module that received the special name'__main__'.Here is an example module that consumes the
__main__namespace:# namely.py import __main__ def did_user_define_their_name(): return 'my_name' in dir(__main__) def print_user_name(): if not did_user_define_their_name(): raise ValueError('Define the variable `my_name`!') if '__file__' in dir(__main__): print(__main__.my_name, "found in file", __main__.__file__) else: print(__main__.my_name)
Example usage of this module could be as follows:
# start.py import sys from namely import print_user_name # my_name = "Dinsdale" def main(): try: print_user_name() except ValueError as ve: return str(ve) if __name__ == "__main__": sys.exit(main())
Now, if we started our program, the result would look like this:
$ python3 start.py Define the variable `my_name`!
The exit code of the program would be 1, indicating an error. Uncommenting the line with
my_name = "Dinsdale"fixes the program and now it exits with status code 0, indicating success:$ python3 start.py Dinsdale found in file /path/to/start.py
Note that importing
__main__doesn’t cause any issues with unintentionally running top-level code meant for script use which is put in theif __name__ == "__main__"block of thestartmodule. Why does this work?Python inserts an empty
__main__module insys.modulesat interpreter startup, and populates it by running top-level code. In our example this is thestartmodule which runs line by line and importsnamely. In turn,namelyimports__main__(which is reallystart). That’s an import cycle! Fortunately, since the partially populated__main__module is present insys.modules, Python passes that tonamely. See Special considerations for __main__ in the import system’s reference for details on how this works.The Python REPL is another example of a “top-level environment”, so anything defined in the REPL becomes part of the
__main__scope:>>> import namely >>> namely.did_user_define_their_name() False >>> namely.print_user_name() Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: Define the variable `my_name`! >>> my_name = 'Jabberwocky' >>> namely.did_user_define_their_name() True >>> namely.print_user_name() Jabberwocky
Note that in this case the
__main__scope doesn’t contain a__file__attribute as it’s interactive.The
__main__scope is used in the implementation ofpdbandrlcompleter.