Agents python-project-structure
Python project organization, module architecture, and public API design. Use when setting up new projects, organizing modules, defining public interfaces with __all__, or planning directory layouts.
git clone https://github.com/wshobson/agents
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/wshobson/agents "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/plugins/python-development/skills/python-project-structure" ~/.claude/skills/wshobson-agents-python-project-structure && rm -rf "$T"
plugins/python-development/skills/python-project-structure/SKILL.mdPython Project Structure & Module Architecture
Design well-organized Python projects with clear module boundaries, explicit public interfaces, and maintainable directory structures. Good organization makes code discoverable and changes predictable.
When to Use This Skill
- Starting a new Python project from scratch
- Reorganizing an existing codebase for clarity
- Defining module public APIs with
__all__ - Deciding between flat and nested directory structures
- Determining test file placement strategies
- Creating reusable library packages
Core Concepts
1. Module Cohesion
Group related code that changes together. A module should have a single, clear purpose.
2. Explicit Interfaces
Define what's public with
__all__. Everything not listed is an internal implementation detail.
3. Flat Hierarchies
Prefer shallow directory structures. Add depth only for genuine sub-domains.
4. Consistent Conventions
Apply naming and organization patterns uniformly across the project.
Quick Start
myproject/ ├── src/ │ └── myproject/ │ ├── __init__.py │ ├── services/ │ ├── models/ │ └── api/ ├── tests/ ├── pyproject.toml └── README.md
Fundamental Patterns
Pattern 1: One Concept Per File
Each file should focus on a single concept or closely related set of functions. Consider splitting when a file:
- Handles multiple unrelated responsibilities
- Grows beyond 300-500 lines (varies by complexity)
- Contains classes that change for different reasons
# Good: Focused files # user_service.py - User business logic # user_repository.py - User data access # user_models.py - User data structures # Avoid: Kitchen sink files # user.py - Contains service, repository, models, utilities...
Pattern 2: Explicit Public APIs with __all__
__all__Define the public interface for every module. Unlisted members are internal implementation details.
# mypackage/services/__init__.py from .user_service import UserService from .order_service import OrderService from .exceptions import ServiceError, ValidationError __all__ = [ "UserService", "OrderService", "ServiceError", "ValidationError", ] # Internal helpers remain private by omission # from .internal_helpers import _validate_input # Not exported
Pattern 3: Flat Directory Structure
Prefer minimal nesting. Deep hierarchies make imports verbose and navigation difficult.
# Preferred: Flat structure project/ ├── api/ │ ├── routes.py │ └── middleware.py ├── services/ │ ├── user_service.py │ └── order_service.py ├── models/ │ ├── user.py │ └── order.py └── utils/ └── validation.py # Avoid: Deep nesting project/core/internal/services/impl/user/
Add sub-packages only when there's a genuine sub-domain requiring isolation.
Pattern 4: Test File Organization
Choose one approach and apply it consistently throughout the project.
Option A: Colocated Tests
src/ ├── user_service.py ├── test_user_service.py ├── order_service.py └── test_order_service.py
Benefits: Tests live next to the code they verify. Easy to see coverage gaps.
Option B: Parallel Test Directory
src/ ├── services/ │ ├── user_service.py │ └── order_service.py tests/ ├── services/ │ ├── test_user_service.py │ └── test_order_service.py
Benefits: Clean separation between production and test code. Standard for larger projects.
Advanced Patterns
Pattern 5: Package Initialization
Use
__init__.py to provide a clean public interface for package consumers.
# mypackage/__init__.py """MyPackage - A library for doing useful things.""" from .core import MainClass, HelperClass from .exceptions import PackageError, ConfigError from .config import Settings __all__ = [ "MainClass", "HelperClass", "PackageError", "ConfigError", "Settings", ] __version__ = "1.0.0"
Consumers can then import directly from the package:
from mypackage import MainClass, Settings
Pattern 6: Layered Architecture
Organize code by architectural layer for clear separation of concerns.
myapp/ ├── api/ # HTTP handlers, request/response │ ├── routes/ │ └── middleware/ ├── services/ # Business logic ├── repositories/ # Data access ├── models/ # Domain entities ├── schemas/ # API schemas (Pydantic) └── config/ # Configuration
Each layer should only depend on layers below it, never above.
Pattern 7: Domain-Driven Structure
For complex applications, organize by business domain rather than technical layer.
ecommerce/ ├── users/ │ ├── models.py │ ├── services.py │ ├── repository.py │ └── api.py ├── orders/ │ ├── models.py │ ├── services.py │ ├── repository.py │ └── api.py └── shared/ ├── database.py └── exceptions.py
File and Module Naming
Conventions
- Use
for all file and module names:snake_caseuser_repository.py - Avoid abbreviations that obscure meaning:
notuser_repository.pyusr_repo.py - Match class names to file names:
inUserServiceuser_service.py
Import Style
Use absolute imports for clarity and reliability:
# Preferred: Absolute imports from myproject.services import UserService from myproject.models import User # Avoid: Relative imports from ..services import UserService from . import models
Relative imports can break when modules are moved or reorganized.
Best Practices Summary
- Keep files focused - One concept per file, consider splitting at 300-500 lines (varies by complexity)
- Define
explicitly - Make public interfaces clear__all__ - Prefer flat structures - Add depth only for genuine sub-domains
- Use absolute imports - More reliable and clearer
- Be consistent - Apply patterns uniformly across the project
- Match names to content - File names should describe their purpose
- Separate concerns - Keep layers distinct and dependencies flowing one direction
- Document your structure - Include a README explaining the organization