VSCode doesn't show poetry virtualenvs - visual-studio-code

VSCode wouldn't show venvs created with poetry in "change kernel" window.
I tried this thread but it didn't work. As well as the topic being 2 years old.
Eventhough I would like to avoid installing all the dependencies in local folder for each project (one of the suggested answers), I still tried it but VSCode doesn't see it either (.venv folder created inside the project).
Right now poetry saves all the venvs in: ~/.cache/pypoetry/virtualenvs after poetry shell any of the venvs. I added it to settings.json with
"python.venvPath": "/home/gobsan/.cache/pypoetry/virtualenvs",
"python.venvFolders": [
"/home/gobsan/.cache/pypoetry/virtualenvs"
],
2x times just in case, but it is greyed out and doesn't seem to work.
I have also tried to change poetry config virtualenvs.path to
~/.local/share/pypoetry/venv/bin
~/.local/share/pypoetry/venv
~/.local/share/pypoetry
hoping VSCode will see it since it can see something there
My main goal is to be able to see and switch between different venvs inside Jupyter. Switching poetry venvs for python scripts is no problem.
Thank you for any help.
ps. working through wsl2

You should end your path with a forward slash, like "/home/gobsan/.cache/pypoetry/virtualenvs/".
I was just researching Poetry and VSCode and ended up doing this as well.
Here's my own path and what my interpreter looks like after the settings update

The settings have changed for the Python extension in VS Code. I was able to select my Poetry virtual environment for my interpreter/ipynb kernel again after changing the dated python.pythonPath setting (yours might be python.venvPath) to python.defaultInterpreterPath in the VS Code settings.json file.
I don't know if changing this setting will allow VS Code to automatically pick up other Poetry virtual environment options listed under poetry env info --path in your CLI. The guidance here will hopefully be of use for that: https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/python/environments#_manually-specify-an-interpreter
{
"python.defaultInterpreterPath": "/Users/myname/Library/Caches/pypoetry/virtualenvs/projectname-randomnumbers-py3.9/bin/python",
}
(my work computer is a Mac)

Related

Use micromamba virtual environment in VS Code

We have to use micromamba for our app because conda is prohibitively slow for installing our packages. We use a devcontainer to install micromamba and its packages. This works for the VS Code terminal but the editor still cannot find my packages.
I only see a way to activate the micromamba environment with a shell script snippet or shell rc file. The works for the terminal, but I dont see a way to activate it for the editor processes. The closest setting I found is specific to venvs.
The solution was to add a .env file setting PYTHONPATH to the modules. Then setting "python.envFile" in .vscode/settings.json to point to that .env file.

why my vscode does not have the same libraries installed in wsl?

I'm using wsl and it runs codes in vscode pretty fine and I have different libraries which I installed through pip and conda in wsl but when I run that code using vscode itself it doesn't recognize the libraries or even pip itself.
I don't have any other environment.
I should add that I installed the packages globally using conda install ... or pip install ... in base environment and I only have base environment and I run my code through code . and I also have python and remote wsl extensions installed in my vscode.
what can be the problem?
I don't have much personal experience with this, but I found some useful information in this Stack Overflow question (even though it doesn't utilize conda), along with https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/remote/wsl-tutorial#_python-development.
I also found this blog post useful, even if it doesn't cover WSL.
In short, make sure you:
Have installed the Python extension (by Microsoft) in VSCode. This is critical for being able to detect and select the Python interpreter. You don't mention having this in place, so I believe this is your likely problem.
You have done this already, but including it for others who might read this later -- Install the Remote - WSL extension (or the Remote Development extension pack) in VSCode.
You are also doing this already -- Start VSCode from inside your WSL distribution. Alternatively, you can start VSCode from Windows and then select the Remote WSL - Reopen Folder in WSL from the Command Palette (also accessible from the "Remote" Status Bar).
In VSCode, open the Command Palette with Shift+Ctrl+P, search for the Python: Select Interpreter command, and you should find your Conda environment in the list.
After selecting this, you should find that your project is using the interpreter and modules that you have installed via conda.
One thing I did to overcome this issue is go to Extensions -> Local (You should have two tabs there, Local and WSL:DISTRO) DISTRO refers to whatever DISTRO you're using, you will see that some of the local extensions are disabled in the current workspace (WSL) and there is a little cloud icon in the WSL:DISTRO tab that says install Local Extensions in WSL:DISTRO once you click that it will let you choose which extensions to install and you should be good to go!

Code-Runner Extension Refuses to Use the Correct Environment

I'm having a bit of trouble getting code-runner to play nice with my conda environments.
Checklist;
The correct python interpreter is selected.
I've explicitly changed the pythonPath and executorMap objects in the settings.json file to the correct environment.
I've tried reinstalling VSCode, Conda and the Code-Runner extension.
I've run a quick script to check which environment is being used and it confirmed that code-runner insists on using the base environment, rather than the one selected, as shown below.
Just to clarify, the code runs perfectly fine, and shows the correct environment selected when I use Ctrl+F5 instead of code-runner (or when I uninstall code-runner and use the normal run feature), but I'd like for it to work with the extension too.
Please help, thanks in advance!

Couldn't start client ESLint message in VS Code

Recently I run into problem with ESlint extension in VS code. When I launch VS code and open up a js file, it popup message "Couldn't start client ESlint". It used to work fine. I tried to re-install eslint, VS code but it didn't help. Here are the versions I used.
VS code: 1.44.0 (user setup)
eslint: v6.8.0
ESLint Extension for VS code: 2.1.2
You need to dig a little bit more to get more details.
A good place to start would be to run the eslint show output command in VSCode. That should be a good starting point.
screenshot of ESLint: Show Output Command
The bottom line is that you need to follow the conventional installation path:
add eslint extension in vscode.
install eslint locally or globally via npm,
run eslint init in your project path and select proper configurations.
restart vscode just to make sure the settings are active.
again, the eslint output console should be a good starting point.
For me, it turns out I had the eslint.runtime and eslint.nodePath settings set to the specified node path on my system, but they were prefixed like this:
~/.nvm/versions/node/v14.17.0/bin/node
Using $HOME instead of ~ didn't solve it either.
I ended up having to specify an absolute path:
/home/<myusername>/.nvm/versions/node/v14.17.0/bin/node

How to correctly set PYTHONPATH for Visual Studio Code

How do I correctly set up the $PYTHONPATH variable for my workspace in VisualStudio Code?
Background Information
I have installed two versions of GNURadio:
GNURadio version 3.7.11 installed by the Linux Mint package manager in /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/gnuradio
GNURadio version 3.7.13.4 installed by PyBOMBS in /home/tejul/Documents/gr13/default/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/gnuradio (my prefix directory is ~/Documents/gr13/default)
I can use the newer version of GNURadio version only after I run the setup_env.sh script (which -- among other things -- adds /home/tejul/Documents/gr13/default/lib/python2.7/dist-packages to $PYTHONPATH) and then start python in the terminal
tejul#Wacom:~/Documents/gr13/default$ ls
bin etc include lib libexec setup_env.sh share src
tejul#Wacom:~/Documents/gr13/default$ source ./setup_env.sh
tejul#Wacom:~/Documents/gr13/default$ python
Python 2.7.15rc1 (default, Nov 12 2018, 14:31:15)
[GCC 7.3.0] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> from gnuradio import gr
>>> gr.version()
'3.7.13.4'
>>>
Without modifying the $PYTHONPATH python -- naturally -- imports the older version of GNURadio.
I want to write, run, and debug python scripts for the new version of GNURadio in the VisualStudio Code. I've been trying to understand the selection of python interpreters, workspaces, and environments for VSCode.
As far as I understand it, the VSCode workspace setting python.pythonPath is not to be confused with the environment variable $PYTHONPATH. python.pythonPath is the path to the python interpreter used for debugging or running the code, while $PYTHONPATH is the environment variable which python uses to search for modules.
It looks like PyBOMBS did not install its own python interpreter into my prefix directory. So I need to use VSCode with my normal python interpreter located in /usr/bin/python2.7. So redefining VSCode's python.pythonPath or selecting another python interpreter would not help me.
I need to let VSCode use my own version of the environment variable $PYTHONPATH which would tell my regular python interpreter to import modules preferably from /home/tejul/Documents/gr13/default/lib/python2.7/dist-packages.
Problem
Following the documentation, I have created my own .env file in the workspace directory which sets the order of preference for locations from which python should import the modules. Alas, it has no effect on the python interpreter.
Can you see anything that I am doing wrong here? I have also tried:
Setting the PYTHONPATH to one folder level higher, i.e. /home/tejul/Documents/gr13/default/lib/python2.7, this did not help
Calling the variable $PYTHONPATH instead of PYTHONPATH, this did not help
Restarting VSCode after each change of the .env file, this did not help
Using double quotes around the path string, e.g. PYTHONPATH="/home/tejul/Documents/gr13/default/lib/python2.7:/usr/lib/python2.7", this did not help
I have a situation that I believe is relatively common. I want a script to import a module from another directory. My python project is laid out as follows:
~/project/
|
|---modules/
|
|---mod.py
|---scripts/
|---script.py
in script.py, I have from modules import mod. So my PYTHONPATH needs to be set to ~/project/ (something that PyCharm does automatically).
VSCode is a great editor, but everywhere else, it falls short, in my opinion. This is a perfect example of that.
I create a default launch.json file to "run the current file". A "cwd": "${fileDirname}" line has to be added to make things work like they do in PyCharm (FYI, a list of the built-in variables can be found here).
Debugging
For debugging (the "play" button on the sidebar, or the F5 key), the PYTHONPATH set in launch.json or your .env file takes effect. Note that in the .env file, you cannot use variables such as ${workspaceRoot}, but you can easily append or insert to the path by using the proper separator for your platform (; for Windows and : for everyone else).
Because I want to take advantage of that variable, I put this in my launch.json:
"env": {"PYTHONPATH": "${workspaceFolder}${pathSeparator}${env:PYTHONPATH}"}
(Thanks to #someonr for the suggestion to use ${pathSeparator}.)
It appears that you can prepend/append to whatever is inherited from the environment (this is not true for settings.json; see below).
This will also work for the hotkey Ctrl+F5 (run without debugging).
For reference, here's the full file, which replicates what PyCharm does automatically:
{
"version": "0.2.0",
"configurations": [
{
"name": "Python: Current File",
"type": "python",
"request": "launch",
"program": "${file}",
"console": "integratedTerminal",
"cwd": "${fileDirname}",
"env": {"PYTHONPATH": "${workspaceFolder}${pathSeparator}${env:PYTHONPATH}"}
}
]
}
Run in terminal
If I hit the "play" button that appears on the top right of the editor window (when a python file is the active tab), it will not work. This runs the current file in a terminal, which doesn't pay attention to launch.json at all. To make that work, you have to define PYTHONPATH in a settings.json file, by adding this:
"terminal.integrated.env.osx": {"PYTHONPATH": "${workspaceFolder}"}
(Note there are different values for each platform.) If you've selected a python interpreter (e.g. from a virtual environment), you will already have a settings.json file in the .vscode directory. Mine looks like this:
{
"python.pythonPath": "/Users/me/project/venv/bin/python3",
"terminal.integrated.env.osx": {"PYTHONPATH": "${workspaceFolder}"}
}
You can't append or insert values into the inherited PYTHONPATH via the settings.json file. It will only take one string, and it will not parse separators. So even though you could get the value using ${env:PYTHONPATH}, you won't be able to do anything with it.
Moreover, you can't set the current working directory. Even though it would seem you could set it with "terminal.integrated.cwd": "${workspaceFolder}", it doesn't work. So if any of your scripts do anything with paths relative to their location in the tree, they won't work. The working directory will be your project root.
Note that any changes to the settings.json file will require that you exit the integrated terminal and restart it.
Linting
Nothing I do to launch.json regarding PYTHONPATH makes any difference to pylint, which will red-underline from modules import mod, despite the fact I can put the cursor on mod, hit F12, and the file opens. Snooping around linting settings, the defaults for mypy include --ignore-missing-imports. To replicate this behavior with pylint, add this to your settings.json:
"python.linting.pylintArgs": [
"--disable=F0401"
]
Shame that we just have to work around this, but the autocomplete helps a lot when writing the import statements to begin with.
Conclusion
There are many layers to VSCode and it's hard to get things to work together. It seems multiple environments are floating around. In the end:
I cannot "run in terminal" because I can't set the current working directory to be the path containing the current file.
I cannot set PYTHONPATH for pylint as that runs in some environment different than the integrated terminal and whatever is controlled by launch.json, so I can only tell pylint to ignore import errors.
Running with F5 works if you set PYTHONPATH either via an .env file or in launch.json
This question deserves an upvote because the documentation is missing some important details.
Example
Suppose your project layout is like this
myproject/
.vscode/
settings.json
.env
src/
a_module.py
tests/
test_a.py
Open the settings.json fie and insert these lines
"terminal.integrated.env.windows": {
"PYTHONPATH": "${workspaceFolder}/src;${workspaceFolder}/tests"
},
"python.envFile": "${workspaceFolder}/.env",
Note that ${workspaceFolder} evaluates to myproject, it is not to the .vscode folder.
In the .env file enter this
WORKSPACE_FOLDER=C:/full/path/to/myproject
PYTHONPATH=${WORKSPACE_FOLDER}/src;${WORKSPACE_FOLDER}/tests
Note that on Windows the slashes in the path lean forward, like so /. Different paths are separated with a ; (on other platforms with a :).
This blog was helpful.
OP seemed to have asked about path syntax for the .env file and the vscode set up so that it finds and reads some custom module files. My problem was similar in that I wanted code to find my custom modules for import in a script. I did not want to put my custom modules in a folder inside my python environment. I also wanted to avoid setting one or more paths as PYTHONPATH for the User Variables in the Windows Environment Variables - but this will work if you want to do it.
I am working in vscode in Windows 10.
1) SYNTAX:
a) I found that the following path syntax works in the env file:
PYTHONPATH = C:/0APPS/PYTHON/_MODULES
My .py module files are in this folder.
b) # works for comments in the .env file.
2) VSCODE SET-UP: I found that the following works:
a) Like sunew said at #2 My setup: Use the Explorer in vscode to open at your selected project workspace folder. For me that is Q:\420 PYTHON
b) Give the env file a name, like vscode.env file and place it in that folder at the top level of the workspace.
c) Open vscode settings and search .env where under the Extensions > Python you will find "Python: env file". Edit the box to add your env file name just before .env.
e.g. ${workspaceFolder}/vscode.env
d) import custom_modulename now work for me - in the python interactive window and in a script.
Setting PYTHONPATH in .env works for me.
Note that the effect just is for vscode and the tools it runs, such as pylint.
My situation:
I have a project that is not a pip installable package, but simply a source folder. (For historical reasons...)
myproject/src
The project has dependencies defined in a pip requires file.
My setup:
I create a virtualenv, and install the packages from the requires file.
I open vscode in the folder myproject - so this becomes the root of the vscode "project".
I point vscode to use the virtualenv as the python interpreter. This will make imports of dependencies installed with pip work. (For linters, intellisense, etc)
To also make imports from my project source work for the linters (pylint especially) in vscode, I add a .env with this content, adding my project source folder to the PYTHONPATH:
PYTHONPATH=./src:${PYTHONPATH}
For tools like Pyright you can edit python.analysis.extraPaths in the workspace settings.json.
Example:
{
...
"python.analysis.extraPaths": [
"src/apps",
"src/override_apps"
],
...
// next lines can be different
"python.linting.enabled": true,
"python.linting.pylintEnabled": true,
"python.linting.mypyEnabled": false,
"python.pythonPath": "environment/bin/python",
...
}
Linux user here. I had trouble getting it to work and there is a lot of interaction with other vscode Python extension settings, but the following worked for me:
Close all workspaces.
Add a single folder that you wish to be the root folder of your new workspace.
Put your .env file there containing PYTHONPATH=/path/to/a:/path/to/b on a single line by itself. Do not use double quotes around the value.
Restart vscode
Create a test.py script that imports a package or module within your folder
vscode should allow your import statement, and should autocomplete to code within your folder.
Edit settings.json in your vs code workspace folder
{
"python.pythonPath": "*python package path*",
"terminal.integrated.env.windows": {
"PYTHONPATH": "${workspaceFolder}/*sub folder*;*python package path*"
},
"python.defaultInterpreterPath": "*path to python exe*",
"python.analysis.extraPaths": [
"*python package path*",
"*python package path*"
],
"python.autoComplete.extraPaths": [
"*python package path*",
"*python package path*"
]}
Works good!
I also had a similar issue where I was using the vs-code on a remote server over ssh, the server had multiple user-accounts so the typical ubuntu python path did not work for me.
The easiest way, I have found for doing debugging was to first find out my own python install location using "which python". The output would be something like "/home/user_name/anaconda3/bin/python".
Then in vs-code, I manually set the python interpreter location to be the above location. I did this by clicking on the python tab on the bottom of vs code. like the Python 3.8.5 64-bit in this picture.
This will open the command pallete asking for the location of python interpreter, as shown in this image. manually put the location of python install here.
After doing all these steps, my python debugging is working smoothly.
Running VSCode 1.6.2, with Python extension v2021.10.1365161279 on Windows 10.
Debugging works based on the env file, I used the default file .env:
PYTHONPATH=<full_path_to_the_workspace_folder>
Running works based on the .vscode/settings.json file with such a setting
"terminal.integrated.env.windows": {"PYTHONPATH": "<full_path_to_the_workspace_folder>"}
just that I found I needed to disable+reload+enable the extension if I changed the path.
Two other issues that I spent a long time figuring out (despite the great answers above) which may help others:
Make sure that you have configured VS Code to allow terminal
configurations to amend your shell settings (via Manage Workspace
Shell Permissions (see
https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/editor/integrated-terminal#_configuration). Otherwise VS Code silently ignores your
terminal.integrated.env.{platform} settings.
Pylint will only search for other modules in the worspace directory if the module from which it is launched is in a folder which is a package (ie has _init_.py file) (See https://docs.pylint.org/en/1.6.0/run.html) meaning that pylint will continue to highlight import errors despite the code running properly due to the VS Code launch.json configured as above.
These are 3 different ways to solve the issue :
1/ Editing PYTHONPATH :
export PYTHONPATH=/Users/.../Projects/MyNewProject/src
python3 myfile.py to run the file
2/ Editing VSCode settings :
add "terminal.integrated.env.osx": {"PYTHONPATH": "${workspaceFolder}/src"} to settings.json in VScode
3/ Adding a setup.py file to your src/ directory.
create the file src/setup.py
from setuptools import find_packages, setup
setup(
name="sample",
description="Sample Python Project",
packages=find_packages(),
)
run python -m pip install -e ./src/ to install all modules in src/ as packages
After for reasons unknown my .venv/Lib/site-packages/.pth solution failed, as well as my subsequent .vscode\settings.json one, and an .env didn't work on my Windows 10*, I settled for the environment-independent way to import ./src/lib.py in ./test/test_lib.py:
import os, sys
sys.path.append(os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), '../src'))
from lib import foo
That also works in non-IDE terminals, and VS Code's pycodestyle still complains when I forget an extra newline between functions.
*: VS Code 1.70.0 release note:
Loading environment variables from .env files
A number of fixes have been made to loading environment variables from
.env files, including detecting changes to the .env files. Python
kernels will now load environment variables from the file defined in
the setting python.envFile.
Using VS Code, a pip virtual env, you can put at the end of the .venv/bin/activate file:
export PYTHONPATH="${PYTHONPATH}:/path/to/your/package"
package -> module1 -> abc.py and you can use: import module.abc etc.