I am using IntelliJ IDEA Community 2020.1 and I have just started a new project by assigning as the project SDK the python version of the environment I use.
This environment includes, among all others, the following (relevant) packages:
jupyter
jupyter-client
jupyter-console
jupyter-core
ipykernel
ipython
ipython-genutils
Also, in IntelliJ, I have installed the Python Community Edition plugin.
However, when I want to edit a ".ipynb" file within IntelliJ, I can't see the code split in cells as in the normal Jupyter notebook.
I have double checked everything, and I think that I didn't miss anything it is suggested here: https://www.jetbrains.com/help/idea/jupyter-notebook-support.html, nevertheless I can't solve the issue.
Jupyter Notebook Support is an Ultimate feature, meaning it is available in the IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate only.
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I've been trying to use the packages pandas, numpy, matplotlib, seaborn in my "Visual Studio Code", but the program keeps showing me the following message:
"import pandas could not be resolved from source Pylance(reportMissingModuleSource)"
Previously to Visual Studio Code I installed "Anaconda" to use Jupyter, and now it says that i have the existing packages (pandas, numpy...) but keeps appearing this message that doesn't allow me to use pandas in my Visual Studio.
Anyone could help me to solve this issue?
I tried installing again all the packages to check if they didn't exist but apparently are installed all of them but in another route. I can't find how is the way to put them so the Visual Studio Code recognizes them and I can use them.
I also received similar an error on my IDE VSCode and currently using mac m1 .First we need to make sure that the python3 interpreter version from terminal version is the same with our python version selection in VSCode.
open terminal.
type 'python3'
then you will see your python version.(my python3 version is 3.9.12)
python3 version
open your IDE VSCode
open any/current folder that related to python project on IDE VSCode
Check your python version at the bottom right on IDE VSCode (in my case the python version is 3.10.64)
change or switch VSCode python version from 3.10.64 to 3.9.12 (same with your python version on your pc)
done
I also had this problem and it was because of version mismatches.
I had installed Python AND Anaconda. If anyone else has done this and gets this error, you need to uninstall both. Then install Anaconda only; Python (the compatible version) is installed as part of that process.
See https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/install/windows/
Also, you can click on the interpreter version at the bottom left corner of the screen (Vs.code 2022) it should show a dropdown menu with a list of the available and selected python interpreter. Click on add interpreter path and paste the path to the python interpreter with all the required modules installed and click enter. This should resolve the problem.
I re-entered the path to Python interpreter and warning disappeared. Hope that helps you.
Another way I solved this issue having followed every other installation process to the letter was deactivating Pylance. Works a (py)charm now.
I encountered this problem in VSCode under remote to WSL2 of Windows 10. The Python version is correct as interpreter (3.9.13) and the terminal in VSCode is also under the same envs (ie. VSCode ran "conda activate xx" and (xx) is shown in prompt)
Originally, I tried to install the pandas by the following command.
sudo apt-get install python3-pandas
Pandas was installed successfully as stated in the terminal but the problem is still there.
When I try to install pandas by the following command, the problem solved.
pip install pandas
I am quite familiar with Pycharm except 1 thing that I can't seem to figure out how to download Keras_contrib which is not availble in conda's channel and conda-forge channel which is also often used.
I have read the following article which suggest to add additional channel to conda.
"How to Install a Package in PyCharm when project interpreter is set to conda, and the package is not provided/listed by conda? 1"
but as I mentioned Keras_contrib is not provided, and I am not sure quite sure how to download it.
I managed to install Keras_contrib sucessfully to my environment which is also used by Pycharm interpreter, but for some reason, Pycharm does not recognize it.
I follow instruction given in https://github.com/keras-team/keras-contrib
which is running setup.py install
Here are the questions
By doing this Does it get install in the site_packages automatically? because I do not see it.
if I have to do it manually, how come my environment can recognize it, but Pycharm cannot.
Is there a default location in which environment and Pycharm usually look at?
because it would make sense in this case that one may recognize it while other may not.
How can I download Keras_contrib which is not avaliable in well known channel?
Is there other way to check that Pycharm Interpreter is compatible with my anaconda environment other than looking folder it is linked to?
In my case they link to the same environment, but Pycharm just cannot recognize
I just figured it out.
so Pycharm looks at site-packages of your environment.
I solved by problem that Pycharm cannot recognize the packages while anacoda env can by copy and past the Keras_contrib to the site-packages. (I still find this to be strange if any one answer to this. Feel free to comment)
I'm actually have an similar issue as described here after update python, pyistaller, pyqt5, pyqt5-tools. Before I got the desired "Windows Vista-style" without app.setStyle('windowsvista') when I run the compiled stand-alone executable.
Now I got the Windows "Classic-style" instead. If I start the application in PyCharm it will use the desired "Windows Vista-style".
Currently installed on Win7 64bit:
Python : 3.6.4
PyInstaller: 3.3.1
PyQt5 : 5.10
pyqt5-tools: 5.9.0.1.2 (update to 5.9.1.1 doesn't work)
Does anyone have any idea why PyInstaller ignored the style?
The error seems to have been fixed in a unmerged branch of PyInstaller. More information can be found on the GitHub pull request conversation, but reinstalling PyInstaller using pip install https://github.com/bjones1/pyinstaller/archive/pyqt5_fix.zip fixed the same style issue for me on Mac.
I use pyinstaller in generate pythion program with matplotlib a exe file
The exe is generated well but when use the exe, there is a error said no module named 'tz'
what does it mean?
I have test the pythinstaller with program with numby and pyqt4 without matplotlib, it worksenter image description here well! )
I have find the solution on pyinstaller git hub provided by Cecil Curry.
It is:
This is a known issue. python-dateutil 2.5.0 is currently broken with respect to PyInstaller, unfortunately.
Until python-dateutil issues a new stable release correcting this, consider temporarily downgrading to python-dateutil 2.4.2. Apologies for the mild inconvenience – and thanks for taking the time to report this, nonetheless.
I have tested and it works
I thought that the standalone PsychoPy install could coexist happily if Python was installed separately on the PC to but I can't get it to, nor can I find any docs. (I'm using Windows 7)
I have the lastest standalone version installed and the shortcut to run it is
"D:\Program Files (x86)\PsychoPy2\pythonw.exe" "D:\Program Files (x86)\PsychoPy2\Lib\site-packages\PsychoPy-1.81.02-py2.7.egg\psychopy\app\psychopyApp.py"
This works fine if my system env variables for PYTHONHOME & PYTHONPATH aren't set but I also use Python for other apps and need them setting to point to the other version of Python I have installed natively. When these env vars are set, Psychopy fails to load and gives no error messages at all.
Can anyone advise how I get them to play together nicely? (I thought it used to work last year, has something changed?)
[ I've tried a full uninstall of psychopy and freshly installed the latest standalone version v1.81.02
Yes, this is an unfortunate consequence of the way that PsychoPy is currently bundled with it's own closed environment in it's own python and dependencies installed seperately.
However, a new option to install psychopy using the conda package manager was introduced recently for Mac OS but some have also got it to work on Windows with a bit of tweaking.. Work is currently ongoing for this feature. I doubt that it was working previously unless you manually installed all dependencies in your default python, or ran linux:
On linux you can simply install psychopy from the neuro.debian repository, making it available for python system-wide. See PsychoPy documentation.
Thinking about it, I don't think it would ever worked if you had set PYTHONPATH (I don't know about PYTHONHOME).
BUT I did have a 'regular' python installation running alongside my Standalone PsychoPy install by not using the PYTHONPATH variable. You can add further paths to your python importing path (I assume that's the aim here) without setting any environment variable by adding text files ending in .pth to your site-packages directory. Essentially any lines in a .pth file that is found while navigating the existing path will also be added to the path!
Actually, according to the python docs you can also set a flag -E to ignore the environment variables:
https://docs.python.org/2/using/cmdline.html
To use that solution for the Standalone PsychoPy installation you'd have to alter the application shortcut to add this (that should get the app to load), but also make a couple of changes to the code for running scripts so that they also run with the flag set.
I still think not setting those variables is the easier solution though.
cheers,
Jon