Issue
I created a venv using python3.6 on my mac os in this folder
/Users/kim/Documents/Apps/PythonApps/python36-miros-a3
I ran a pip install pylint
after I activated the virtual env
My workspace is in /Users/kim/Documents/Apps/WebApps/miros-a3
Inside my vscode workspace, I have the following Workspace settings
{
"folders": [
{
"path": "."
}
],
"settings": {
"python.pythonPath": "/Users/kim/Documents/Apps/PythonApps/python36-miros-a3/bin/python3.6",
"python.venvPath": "/Users/kim/Documents/Apps/PythonApps"
}
}
I have tried setting a custom path for the pylint and also changing the venvpath.
The pylint kept complaining about the import statement saying it does not exist.
As you can see, they are in the same folder, and I can definitely execute my python files.
What can I do to avoid these kind of false positive import errors?
I have also tried the following:
- go to commandline turn on the virtual env and then type
code
to activate the vscode as recommended here https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/setup/mac - also tried this https://donjayamanne.github.io/pythonVSCodeDocs/docs/troubleshooting_linting/
Solution
Pylint has some quirks. In this case it doesn't know where to find your module because it's in subdirectory of your venv path. To solve this:
Put this setting in your workspace or folder settings:
"python.linting.pylintArgs": [ "--init-hook", "import sys; sys.path.append('<path to folder your module is in>')" ]
or, maybe better
Generate .pylintrc file. From integrated terminal with venv activated run:
pylint --generate-rcfile > .pylintrc
then open the generated file and uncomment the init-hook= part to be:
init-hook='import sys; sys.path.append("<path to folder you module is in>")'
Read the .pylintrc and tweak settings if you wish. In both cases path should point to your 'database' folder.
After learning about pylint settings, do it the right way:
from database.database_dispatcher import ...
See this answer by Anthony Sottile.
Answered By - Braca Answer Checked By - David Goodson (WPSolving Volunteer)