Visual Studio Code pylint: Unable to import 'p

2020-02-07 19:07发布

问题:

I'm using pylint in Visual Studio Code to develop a Google App Engine (GAE) Cloud Endpoint API in Python. I'm unable to resolve a lint error. I don't know what's causing the error, but at a guess, pylint cannot find the protorpc library?

The recommended fix in Troubleshooting Linting is to configure workspace settings to point to fully qualified python executable. I have done this, but the lint error remains.

protorpc itself is installed to:

~/google-cloud-sdk/platform/google_appengine/lib/protorpc-1.0/protorpc

...and this contains the remote.py module that cannot be imported:

__init__.py             generate_python.py      protojson.py            transport.py
definition.py           google_imports.py       protourlencode.py       util.py
descriptor.py           message_types.py        registry.py             webapp
generate.py             messages.py             remote.py               wsgi
generate_proto.py       protobuf.py             static

I've added this path to $PYTHONPATH (along with the kitchen sink):

export GOOGLE_CLOUD_SDK=~/google-cloud-sdk
export APPENGINE_PATH=$GOOGLE_CLOUD_SDK/platform/google_appengine

export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:$GOOGLE_CLOUD_SDK
export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:$GOOGLE_CLOUD_SDK/lib
export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:$GOOGLE_CLOUD_SDK/lib/googlecloudsdk
export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:$GOOGLE_CLOUD_SDK/lib/googlecloudsdk/api_lib
export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:$GOOGLE_CLOUD_SDK/platform/google_appengine/lib
export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:$GOOGLE_CLOUD_SDK/platform/google_appengine/lib/protorpc-1.0/protorpc

The application runs locally and also when deployed, so this appears to be just a lint error, but it's frustrating that I can't solve it.

Using third-party libraries states:

The Python runtime in the standard environment includes the Python standard library, the App Engine libraries, and a few bundled third-party packages.

Because of this, I assumed 'the App Engine libraries' includes protorpc, but I'm unsure. Moreover, Adding the Cloud Endpoints Frameworks library to the sample API only requires google-endpoints be installed to the app's lib directory:

pip install -t lib google-endpoints --extra-index-url=https://gapi-pypi.appspot.com/admin/nurpc-dev --ignore-installed

My point is, I don't think I've not installed something, and I don't think I'm missing anything in my (web) app's lib directory.

回答1:

Open the settings file of your Visual Studio Code (settings.json) and add the library path to the "python.autoComplete.extraPaths" list.

"python.autoComplete.extraPaths": [
    "~/google-cloud-sdk/platform/google_appengine/lib/webapp2-2.5.2",
    "~/google-cloud-sdk/platform/google_appengine",
    "~/google-cloud-sdk/lib",
    "~/google-cloud-sdk/platform/google_appengine/lib/endpoints-1.0",
    "~/google-cloud-sdk/platform/google_appengine/lib/protorpc-1.0"
],


回答2:

Changing the library path worked for me. Hitting Ctrl + Shift + P and typing python interpreter and choosing one of the available shown. One was familiar (as pointed to a virtualenv that was working fine earlier) and it worked. Take note of the version of python you are working with, either 2.7 or 3.x and choose accordingly



回答3:

I was facing same issue (VS Code).Resolved by below method

1) Select Interpreter command from the Command Palette (Ctrl+Shift+P)

2) Search for "Select Interpreter"

3) Select the installed python directory

Ref:- https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/python/environments#_select-an-environment



回答4:

For your case, add the following code to vscode's settings.json.

"python.linting.pylintArgs": [
    "--init-hook='import sys; sys.path.append(\"~/google-cloud-sdk/platform/google_appengine/lib\")'"
]

For the other who got troubles with pip packages, you can go with

"python.linting.pylintArgs": [
    "--init-hook='import sys; sys.path.append(\"/usr/local/lib/python3.7/dist-packages\")'"
]

You should replace python3.7 above with your python version.



回答5:

I've not played around with all possibilities, but at least I had the impression that this could be a python version related issue. No idea why, I just trusted my gut.

Thus I just changed the pythonPath to python3 (default: python):

"python.pythonPath": "python3"

I reinstalled the dependencies (including pylint!!!) with

pip3 install <package> --user

... and after restarting vs code, everything looked fine.

HTH Kai



回答6:

First I will check the python3 path where it lives

And then in the VS Code settings just add that path, for example:

"python.pythonPath": "/usr/local/bin/python3"


回答7:

I resolved this by adding the protorpc library to the $PYTHONPATH environment variable. Specifically, I pointed to the library installed in my App Engine directory:

export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:/Users/jackwootton/google-cloud-sdk/platform/google_appengine/lib/protorpc-1.0

After adding this to ~/.bash_profile, restarting my machine and Visual Studio Code, the import errors went away.

For completeness, I did not modify any Visual Studio Code settings relating to Python. Full ~/.bash_profile file:

export PATH=/Users/jackwootton/protoc3/bin:$PATH

export PYTHONPATH=/Users/jackwootton/google-cloud-sdk/platform/google_appengine

export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:/Users/jackwootton/google-cloud-sdk/platform/google_appengine/lib/protorpc-1.0

# The next line updates PATH for the Google Cloud SDK.
if [ -f '/Users/jackwootton/google-cloud-sdk/path.bash.inc' ]; then source '/Users/jackwootton/google-cloud-sdk/path.bash.inc'; fi

# The next line enables shell command completion for gcloud.
if [ -f '/Users/jackwootton/google-cloud-sdk/completion.bash.inc' ]; then source '/Users/jackwootton/google-cloud-sdk/completion.bash.inc'; fi


回答8:

The visual studio default setting should be the same as the interpreter path.

Change VS code default setting: windows: File > Preferences > Settings

{
    "python.pythonPath": "C:\\Users\\Anaconda3\\pythonw.exe",
    "workbench.startupEditor": "newUntitledFile"
}

Find the right interpreter: windows: Ctrl+Shift+P->select interpreter:

the path of that interpreter should be same as the version you are working on.



回答9:

I was still getting these errors even after confirming that the correct python and pylint were being used from my virtual env.

Eventually I figured out that in Visual Studio Code I was A) opening my project directory, which is B) where my Python virtual environment was, but I was C) running my main Python program from two levels deeper. Those three things need to be in sync for everything to work.

Here's what I would recommend:

  1. In Visual Studio Code, open the directory containing your main Python program. (This may or may not be the top level of the project directory.)

  2. Select Terminal menu > New Terminal, and create an virtual environment directly inside the same directory.

    python3 -m venv env
    
  3. Install pylint in the virtual environment. If you select any Python file in the sidebar, Visual Studio Code will offer to do this for you. Alternatively, source env/bin/activate then pip install pylint.

  4. In the blue bottom bar of the editor window, choose the Python interpreter env/bin/python. Alternatively, go to Settings and set "Python: Python Path." This sets python.pythonPath in Settings.json.