3
4from CTkMenuBar import *
5from CTkMessagebox import CTkMessagebox
6from framework.tab_View import TabView 7from hPyT import *
8
9
1import sys
2import tkinter as tk
3from pathlib import Path
4from tkinter import PhotoImage, filedialog, ttk 5
6import customtkinter as C
7
22from menu_Bar import Menubar
23from pywinstyles import *
24from settings import Settings
25from text_Area import textarea 26from tkterm import Terminal
27
28# File imports here
27from settings import Settings
28from text_Area import textarea
29from tkterm import Terminal
30from vertexai.generative_models import FinishReason, GenerativeModel, Part 31
32C.set_appearance_mode("dark") # Default system theme
33
27from settings import Settings
28from text_Area import textarea
29from tkterm import Terminal
30from vertexai.generative_models import FinishReason, GenerativeModel, Part 31
32C.set_appearance_mode("dark") # Default system theme
33
An object has been imported but is not used anywhere in the file. It should either be used or the import should be removed.
import os
def example():
print("This snippet is not using the `os` import anywhere.")
def example():
print("This looks good now!")
One major reason why this issue can cause confusion is when it's raised for imports that are meant to be exported, for use in other places.
For example, consider this file, mypackage/__init__.py
:
from mypackage.foo import is_foo
from mypackage.bar import bar_function
This is a very common pattern to export common functionality from modules, to
the top level of a package. But there is a major problem with this approach.
Consider this file, mypackage/foo.py
:
import os
def is_foo(item):
return os.path.exists(item)
Since os
is imported inside foo.py
, you can actually do this:
>>> from mypackage.foo import os
Although weird, Python automatically exports all imports in a file. In practice however, it is ill-advised to rely on this behaviour.
If you want to explicitly export an imported item in a file, add it to the
special variable named __all__
:
from mypackage.foo import is_foo
from mypackage.bar import bar_function
__all__ = ['is_foo', 'bar_function'] # Notice that these are strings!
DeepSource won't raise an issue if the imported item is present in __all__
.