I am having the same problem as this thread regarding twilio-python:
twilio.rest missing from twilio python module version 2.0.8?
However I have the same problem but I have 3.3.3 installed. I still get "No module named rest" when trying to import twilio.rest.
Loading the library from stand alone python script works. So I know that pip installing the package worked.
from twilio.rest import TwilioRestClient
def main():
account = "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"
token = "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"
client = TwilioRestClient(account, token)
call = client.calls.create(to="+12223344",
from_="+12223344",
url="http://ironblanket.herokuapp.com/",
method="GET")
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
but this does not work:
from twilio.rest import TwilioRestClient
def home(request):
client = TwilioRestClient(account, token)
Do you have any idea what I can try next?
I named a python file in my project twilio.py. Since that file was loaded first, then subsequent calls to load twilio would reference that file instead of the twilio library.
TLDR: just don't name your python file twilio.py
Check which versions of pip and python you are running with this command:
which -a python
which -a pip
pip needs to install to a path that your Python executable can read from. Sometimes there will be more than one version of pip like pip-2.5, pip-2.7 etc. You can find all of them by running compgen -c | grep pip. There can also be more than one version of Python, especially if you have Macports or brew or multiple versions of Python installed.
Check which version of the twilio module is installed by running this command:
$ pip freeze | grep twilio # Or pip-2.7 freeze etc.
The output should be twilio==3.3.3.
I hope that helps - please leave a comment if you have more questions.
This Worked For me : (Windows)
Python librarys are in G:\Python\Lib
(Python is installed at G:, it might be different for you)
Download Twilio from github at paste the library at >> G:\Python\Lib <<
import problem gone :)
I had the same issue and it drove me crazy. Finally I figured it out. When you get the error:
AttributeError: module 'twilio' has no attribute 'version'
Look 2 lines above and the error is telling you where it expects to find the twilio file. So I moved it from where it was to where it was asking it to be.
Installed to:
c:\users\rhuds\appdata\local\programs\python\python37-32\lib\site-packages
Moved it to:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in
import twilio
File "C:\Users\rhuds\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python37-32\twilio.py", line 2, in
Now I can import twilio. Besides that, the only other thing I did was uninstall old versions of Python, but I don't think that really mattered.
Related
I've downloaded the looker_sdk for python.
Wrote a very simple program:
from looker_sdk import client, models
def test_looker():
sdk = client.setup("./looker.ini")
if __name__ == "__main__":
test_looker()
However, when I'm running it I'm getting the error:
ImportError: cannot import name 'client' from 'looker_sdk'.
I do see the models and was able to perform:
sdk = looker_sdk.init31()
what am I missing?
Thanks,
Nir.
It seems there may be a missing client.py file in looker_sdk version 0.1.3b8, or in your installation - I tested this on 0.1.3b4 and found no such issue.
I recommend that you uninstall the package and re-install the latest version from PyPI.
I need to perform a BULK whois query using shodan API.
I came across this code
import shodan
api = shodan.Shodan('inserted my API-KEY- within single quotes')
info = api.host('8.8.8.8')
After running the module i get the following error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:/Users/PIPY/AppData/Local/Programs/Python/Python37/dam.py", line 1, in
import shodan
File "C:/Users/PIPY/AppData/Local/Programs/Python/Python37\shodan.py", line 2, in
api = shodan.Shodan('the above insereted API KEY')
AttributeError: module 'shodan' has no attribute 'Shodan'
I'm learning python and have limited scripting/programming experience.
Could you please help me out?
Cheers
You seem to have dam.py and shodan.py – Python defaults to importing from the module directory, so the installed shodan package gets masked.
Try renaming shodan.py to e.g. shodan_test.py (and of course fixing up any imports, etc.).
I have solved the issue by re-installing the shodan module under the C:\Users\PIPY\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python37\Scripts>pip install shodan
Thank you for the help AKX.
I had this same issue but after renaming my file as something different than shodan.py, I had to also delete the compiled class shodan.pyc to avoid the error.
Also, if you have more than one version of python installed, i.e. python2 and python3, use
python -m pip install shodan instead of pip install shodan, to ensure that you are installing the library in the same version of shodan that you are using to execute your script.
If you are executing your script with python3 shodan_test.py then use python3 -m pip install shodan
when I run mitmproxy command in command line, I get the following error.
% mitmproxy
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/local/bin/mitmproxy", line 7, in <module>
from libmproxy.main import mitmproxy
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/site-packages/libmproxy/main.py", line 5, in <module>
import thread
ImportError: No module named 'thread'
I googled this error and found this stackoverflow Q&A page.
pydev importerror: no module named thread, debugging no longer works after pydev upgrade
according to the page above, the error occurs because module "thread" is renamed to "_thread" in python3.
So, I know what's causing this error, but then what?
I don't know what to do now in order to get rid of this error.
I'm new to python. I've just installed Python and pip into my mac OSX as shown below because I want to use mitmproxy.
% which pip
/usr/local/bin/pip
% pip --version
pip 8.1.1 from /usr/local/lib/python3.5/site-packages (python 3.5)
% which python
/usr/bin/python
% which python3
/usr/local/bin/python3
% python --version
Python 2.7.10
% python3 --version
Python 3.5.1
could anyone please tell me what to do now?
Additional Info
As #linusg answered, I created "thread.py" file in "site-packages" directory and pasted the code below in "thread.py"
from _thread import *
__all__ = ("error", "LockType", "start_new_thread", "interrupt_main", "exit", "allocate_lock", "get_ident", "stack_size", "acquire", "release", "locked")
After I did this, "ImportError: No module named 'thread'" disappeared, but now I have another ImportError, which is "import Cookie ImportError: No module named 'Cookie'".
It seems that in Python 3, Cookie module is renamed to http.cookies (stackoverflow.com/questions/3522029/django-mod-python-error).
Now what am I supposed to do?
What I have in "site-packages" directory
% ls /usr/local/lib/python3.5/site-packages (git)-[master]
ConfigArgParse-0.10.0.dist-info/ mitmproxy-0.15.dist-info/
OpenSSL/ netlib/
PIL/ netlib-0.15.1.dist-info/
Pillow-3.0.0.dist-info/ passlib/
PyYAML-3.11.dist-info/ passlib-1.6.5.dist-info/
__pycache__/ pathtools/
_cffi_backend.cpython-35m-darwin.so* pathtools-0.1.2.dist-info/
_markerlib/ pip/
_watchdog_fsevents.cpython-35m-darwin.so* pip-8.1.1.dist-info/
argh/ pkg_resources/
argh-0.26.1.dist-info/ pyOpenSSL-0.15.1.dist-info/
backports/ pyasn1/
backports.ssl_match_hostname-3.5.0.1.dist-info/ pyasn1-0.1.9.dist-info/
blinker/ pycparser/
blinker-1.4.dist-info/ pycparser-2.14.dist-info/
certifi/ pyparsing-2.0.7.dist-info/
certifi-2016.2.28.dist-info/ pyparsing.py
cffi/ pyperclip/
cffi-1.6.0.dist-info/ pyperclip-1.5.27.dist-info/
click/ setuptools/
click-6.2.dist-info/ setuptools-19.4-py3.5.egg-info/
configargparse.py sitecustomize.py
construct/ six-1.10.0.dist-info/
construct-2.5.2.dist-info/ six.py
cryptography/ test/
cryptography-1.1.2.dist-info/ thread.py
easy_install.py tornado/
hpack/ tornado-4.3.dist-info/
hpack-2.0.1.dist-info/ urwid/
html2text/ urwid-1.3.1.dist-info/
html2text-2015.11.4.dist-info/ watchdog/
idna/ watchdog-0.8.3.dist-info/
idna-2.1.dist-info/ wheel/
libmproxy/ wheel-0.26.0-py3.5.egg-info/
lxml/ yaml/
lxml-3.4.4.dist-info/
In Python 3 instead of:
import thread
Do:
import _thread
You are trying to run Python 2 code on Python 3, which will not work.
As of April 2016, mitmproxy only supports Python 2.7. We're actively working to fix that in the next months, but for now you need to use Python 2 or the binaries provided at http://mitmproxy.org.
As of August 2016, the development version of mitmproxy now supports Python 3.5+. The next release (0.18) will be the first one including support for Python 3.5+.
As of January 2017, mitmproxy only supports Python 3.5+.
Go to you site-packages folder, create a file called thread.py and paste this code in it:
from _thread import *
__all__ = ("error", "LockType", "start_new_thread", "interrupt_main", "exit", "allocate_lock", "get_ident", "stack_size", "acquire", "release", "locked")
This creates an 'alias' for the module _thread called thread. While the _thread module is very small, you can use dir() for bigger modules:
# Examle for the Cookies module which was renamed to http.cookies:
# Cookies.py in site-packages
import http.cookies
__all__ = tuple(dir(http.cookies))
Hope this helps!
Easiest solution is to create a virtualenv with python2 and run mitmproxy on this virtualenv
virtualenv -p `which python2` .env
source .env/bin/activate
pip install mitmproxy
.env/bin/mitmproxy
The name of the file saved could be threading, this would give an error as threading is a predefined class in Python. Try changing the name of your file. It would help....
I have a package that I would like to automatically install and use from within my own Python script.
Right now I have this:
>>> # ... code for downloading and un-targzing
>>> from subprocess import call
>>> call(['python', 'setup.py', 'install'])
>>> from <package> import <name>
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ImportError: No module named <package>
Then I can continue like this:
>>> exit()
$ python
>>> from <package> import <name>
And it works just fine. For some reason, Python is able to pick up the package just fine if I restart after running the setup.py file, but not if I don't. How can I make it work without having the restart step in the middle?
(Also, is there a superior alternative to using subprocess.call() to run setup.py within a python script? Seems silly to spawn a whole new Python interpreter from within one, but I don't know how else to pass that install argument.)
Depending on your Python version, you want to look into imp or importlib.
e.g. for Python 3, you can do:
from importlib.machinery import SourceFileLoader
directory_name = # os.path to module
# where __init__.py is the module entry point
s = SourceFileloader(directory_name, __init__.py).load_module()
or, if you're feeling brave that your Python path knows about the directory:
map(__import__, 'new_package_name')
Hope this helps,
I downloaded from seaborn from GitHub.
Through command prompt, cd to downloads\seaborn folder
python install setup.py
Then using spyder from anaconda, checked if it was installed by running the following in a console
import pip
sorted(["%s==%s" % (i.key, i.version)
for i in pip.get_installed_distributions()])
Seeing that it was not there, go to tools and select "Update module names list"
Again trying the previous code in a python console, the lib was still not showing.
Restarting Spyder and trying import seaborn worked.
Hope this helps.
i have installed pyjamas on debian
http://pyjs.org/getting_started.html
however my program does not find the module, what could be the problem, i have installed pyjamas correctly using apt-get
krisdigitx-virtual-machine ~ # python jamas.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "jamas.py", line 3, in <module>
from pyjamas import Window
ImportError: No module named pyjamas
krisdigitx-virtual-machine ~ #
#!/usr/bin/env python
from pyjs import Window
from pyjs.ui import RootPanel, Button
from pyjs.ui import HTML
def greet(sender):
Window.alert("Hello Krishna!")
b = Button("click me", greet)
Rootpanel().add(b)
After some research:
i had to do pyjsbuild jamas.py to get the output directory, however it gives me a new error
jamas TypeError: jamas.RootPanel().add is not a function
Since you get an
ImportError: No module named pyjamas
you may need to add the module's path to $PYTHONPATH with
export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:/usr/share/pyjamas/library
Please go to http://pyjs.org/GettingHelp.html
The first link "Getting Started" is a detailled walkthrough for an installation to start from scratch. Basically, what it says there is: Get the up-to-date source code from the git repository.
All steps to get Pyjs and Pyjs Desktop running are described in the Wiki article in the necessary detail, but still concise enough.