Is it possible to disable an inspection for the whole file in PyCharm?
The reason this is needed is when dealing with py.test. It uses fixtures which appear to shadow function parameters, and at the same time cause unresolved references. e.g.:
from myfixtures import user # Unused import statement warning
def test_is_awesome(user): # Shadows name 'user' from outer scope warning
assert user.is_awesome()
There is also other warnings from py.test, such as using pytest.raises()
causes a "Can not find reference 'raises'" in pytest.py.
Maybe there's another way to fix these problems? Maybe I'm using py.test incorrectly?
I found that putting the per statement inspection:
at the start of the file suppressed it for the whole file:
To answer the "Maybe I'm using py.test incorrectly?" question:
Importing fixtures is not the best pattern to follow. Instead it is better to put fixtures in a conftest.py file of the package which needs them. If a fixture is used in two packages just put a conftest.py in their parent directory and put the fixture in there. This should get rid of the unused import and shadowing warnings.
As for the
pytest.raises
namespace issue, I don't think there's a solution to this currently. This is something that pylint suffers as well (and I think there's an effort to create a py.test plugin to pylint to address these things). So I think at the end of the day the linter will still need to know a little about py.test.Yes. This answer is for this question only (and not about "Maybe there's another way to fix these problems? Maybe I'm using py.test incorrectly?").
Alternatively (may work or may not: depends on actual inspection .. and I'm not sure if it actually works in PyCharm this way -- not a PyCharm user myself unfortunately)
This is how it looks in PhpStorm (screenshot shows "suppress for statement" option and not "suppress for whole file"):
Related: https://stackoverflow.com/a/20803118/783119