You are not using classes, but you could easily rewrite your code to do so.
A class is basically a namespace which contains functions and variables, as is a module.
Should not make a huge difference whether you call mymodule.method_one()
or mymodule.myclass.method_one()
.
In python there is no such thing as interfaces which you might know from java.
The paradigm in python is Duck typing, that means more or less that for a given module you can tell whether it implements your API if it provides the right methods.
Python does this i.e. to determine what to do if you call myobject[i]
on an instance of your class myclass. It looks whether the class has the method __getitem__
and if it does so, it replaces myobject[i]
by myobject.__getitem__(i)
.
Yout don't have to tell python that your class supports this kind of access, python just figures it out from the way you defined your class.
The same way you should determine whether your module implements your API.
Maybe you want to look inside the hidden dictionary mymodule.__dict__
after import mymodule
which contains all function names and pointers to them of your module. You could then check whether the right functions are present and raise an error otherwise
import my_module_4
#check if my_module_4 implements api
if all(func in my_module_4.__dict__ for func in ("method_one","method_two"):
print "API implemented"
else:
print "Warning: Not all API functions found in my_module_4"