I run vscode version 1.65.2.
Today it started citing the whole "The Zen of Python" in the terminal window every time I run a python script in the debugger.
EDIT: It turns out that it is the python interpreter that does it, not vscode. The problem apparently came after I updated ipykernel to version 6.11.0. I run python version 3.9.1 on Windows.
How can I turn it off?
I havent been able to find an answer to this anywhere.
It turned out that an import statement had found its way into my code: "import this as d", and removing it solved the problem. It is a mystery how it ended up there, I certainly haven't put it there knowingly. But problem solved!
That's really odd. I just had the exact same thing. Even the import this as d was on the first line before everything. I use vscode as well. Removing it does help. But I didn't update a kernel prior to this. It happened while I was writing code I think. Python 3.8.10 on Linux.
I am looking to see if it's possible to run vs code from a jupyter notebook, as in have it as a kernel that I can use to run vs code in the web browser.
https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/user-guide/tasks/integration/vscode/
Is this even possible?
So have what appears in anaconda navigator below, appear in the jupyter lab ui below.
I found this.
https://github.com/jupyterlab/jupyterlab-monaco
Although it's "merely a 'proof-of-concept' implementation and nowhere near production status" so not ready for my use case yet. Still it's there for those interested.
Is there an easy way to convert an ipython notebook to plain python without using ipython itself (i.e. not using ipython nbconvert --to=python ...)?
Background: I want to test if there is a syntax error in various ipython notebooks using travis-ci. However, installing ipython from source takes too long and the ubuntu packages are outdated.
I wrote a simple script that does the conversion. It's probably not fool-proof but works for me. I'd still be happy to hear about a better solution.
Link to script: https://gist.github.com/hannorein/8423ad75547f37bba228
I am experimenting with the music21 library, in preparation for a Machine Learning project that involves genre classification and categorization. I and following some tutorials available here. I am using MuseScore as my MusicXML program, and I am trying to run the whole thing from iPython.
Although I can run the some of the turtorials from the terminal, some elements don't seem to run well from inside iPython. For example:
In [3]: sBach.show()
Out[3]: <music21.ipython21.objects.IPythonPNGObject at 0x10da0aa10>
The line above shows that the PNG object is created, but not displayed. The expected output for 3 above is the following:
Experimenting with the following iPython command, I get a placeholder for an image, but not image.
In [6]: %load_ext music21.ipython21.ipExtension
In [7]: sBach.show()
I can't find any problem with my MusicXMLPath. This tutorial refers to the use of musc21 with Anaconda, but all my developments is done with Enthought, so I prefer not to run another virtual environment to use music21 with iPython.
Is there any way to run music21 in an Enthought/iPython notebook?
I have been grappling with this issue myself. ... Have you set your musicxmlPath in music21? If you have not, it's done via environment.set(key, value). You can query for available keys with environment.keys(). I hope this isn't too simple an answer, but it cleared up the problem for me.
This should be in the iPython music21 documentation somewhere, my apologies: iPython in music21 requires Lilypond to be installed for images to be generated within the notebook itself. There hasn't been (and won't be until MuseScore 2.0 is released) a way using MusicXML to generate PNG images of scores directly.
Edit: 2015 July; music21 2.0 w/ MuseScore 2 will generate the PNG images with MuseScore if it is installed and fallback to Lilypond if it is not installed.
If not yet tried, some steps to isolate the cause of the problem:
1) Update to the latest Canopy (Edit: currently 1.4.1) (might help this, will help generally, won't hurt).
2) Change the Pylab backend in Canopy's IPython shell to "Inline (SVG)", via Preferences / Python. (The default Qt backend in that shell conflicts with music21's use of the tkinter library.)
3) Test your script in that shell rather than in the notebook.
4) Ensure that Canopy User Python is your default Python in a Terminal window, as described here.
5) Test your scripts inside of plain ipython terminal (from Terminal, type ipython).
6) Test in ipython terminal in pylab mode (ipython qtconsole --pylab=inline).
7) Test your scripts inside of ipython notebook running in a regular browser (from Terminal, type ipython notebook, and/or ipython notebook --pylab=inline).
Had similar issues before. It's the same problem when people try to use plot function in ipython/jupyter notebook. You need to call
%matplotlib inline
For me the issue was solved by uninstalling the snap version of musescore and installing it from ppa:mscore-ubuntu/mscore3-stable via https://launchpad.net/~mscore-ubuntu/+archive/ubuntu/mscore3-stable
I am coding in PyCharm Community Edition and making use of the IPython embed function to debug my code. When I run the code, the code stops on the line I have embed and the IPython interactive shell appears at the bottom of PyCharm in the "Run" window. I can inspect my variables and run commands, but all the IPython autocomplete (i.e. tabs) and up and down keys (to retrieve previous commands) don't work anymore. Does anyone know how to get this working from within PyCharm?
Thank you.