Reputation: 4652
EDIT
Using VSCode, I had an issue while debugging in a virtual environment that have different packages which are not installed in the base
environment. After activating the environment with the command activate my_env
, I can use the packages in the environment with usual python command as python main.py
. But while debugging, I can't use the packages which are only installed in my_env
. How can I debug a python code in a virtual environment using VSCode?
This is this the summary of the question. The rest has some specific info about my case.
BEFORE EDIT
I am trying to use xmltodict
package with a simple code using visual studio code.
import xmltodict
with open('C:\\Users\\user\\foo.xml') as f:
db_dict = xmltodict.parse(f.read())
print(db_dict)
I have a virtual environment named my_env
, and I installed xmltodict
package in it. When I activate the environment with activate my_env
, this code works fine. But, when I try to use vscode debug option, it gives No module named 'xmltodict'
error. Becuase vscode debug button opens new cmd and run the debugging command in it, I stopped debugging and typed activate my_env
in that cmd and tried to debug again, but still it can't find the module. Also, I tried jupiter notebook in vscode, it also doesn't see the package.
I see that import xmltodict
is underlined with red in vscode and it says Unable to import 'xmltodict'
, but it works when I run it normally from cmd. This happens sometimes for other modules and I don't know why. I installed xmltodict
module using pip
, maybe it causes that.
I am using Visual Studio Code 1.30.1 with Anaconda Python 3.7.1 on Windows 10.
How can I debug a python code in a virtual environment using VSCode? I saw this question, but I don't think it is exactly what I want?
Upvotes: 57
Views: 92525
Reputation: 151278
justMyCode
to false
I set a breakpoint inside a Python file in my virtual environment. I hovered with my house over that breakpoint in the breakpoint panels, and I saw this tooltip:
Breakpoint in file excluded by filters.
Note: may be excluded because of "justMyCode" option (default == true). Try setting "justMyCode": false in the debug configuration (e.g: launch.json).
So I opened launch.json
, and I modified it to look like this:
{
"version": "0.2.0",
"configurations": [
{
// ...
"justMyCode": false
}
]
}
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 16100
Make sure the environment you want to use is selected in the Python extension for VS Code by running the Select Interpreter
command or via the status bar. Otherwise you can explicitly set the Python interpreter to be used when debugging via the python
setting for your debug config.
Upvotes: 65
Reputation: 3227
venv
python debug"python.pythonPath":"venv/bin/python"
On the left in the debug side panel: Click "create launch.json" below the blue "Run and Config" button A project local launch.json with python is created:
{ "name": "Python", "type": "python", "request": "launch", "program": "${file}", }
Press F5 and shoot
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 782
Use the Python: Select Interpreter command from the Command Palette (Ctrl+Shift+P) and select the python interpreter that belongs to the new virtual environment.
If you are using a virtual env on linux
on the drop down, select env
>bin
>python
i.e env/bin/python
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 1095
I am using venv for creating virtualenv, and VS code to debug the code.
I found we don't have to create a launch.json file but add settings.json under {project}/.vscode/ folder. My settings.json is as below:
{
"python.testing.unittestArgs": [
"-v",
"-s",
".",
"-p",
"test_*.py"
],
"python.testing.pytestEnabled": false,
"python.testing.nosetestsEnabled": false,
"python.testing.unittestEnabled": true,
"python.pythonPath": "/Users/hhh/project/bin/python"
}
I can debug the project and run the unit test as well. Hope it will help you.
Upvotes: 3