If the variable is a class member, then such a member is considered "private" or "semi-private" by convention. In practice it just means that it (might) not show up in some IDEs. And you're supposed to consider it as not part of the public class interface.
I mean it won't show up in the autocomplete of the IDEs.
Like if you type f = Foo()
f.<TAB>
Then the autocomplete (usually) skips the members that start with _.
If you need to guarantee privacy, to be 100% sure that another class cannot rely on that member, use two underscores __. In that caes, the Python interpreter applies so-called 'name mangling' to make sure no one else can access it.
When you run your module with the interpreter, as in 'python foo.py', the __name__ symbol has the value '__main__', but when you run a module as in 'import foo', it doesn't, so that part gets skipped.