How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows?

Viewed 14k times 12

I stumbled upon this article and followed all steps. But pyDev won't see my flask extensions and that's really annoying. There's only one thing (and I think this is the key):

Touch /site-packages/flaskext/__init__.py

Touch is a unix util I think. Is there an equivalent to this on Windows?

     share  improve this question    edited Feb 21 '13 at 8:13     asked Feb 21 '13 at 8:07 How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows?floqqi 1,00722 gold badges99 silver badges1919 bronze badges add a comment

4 Answers

ActiveOldestVotes 26  

The Eclipse uses static analysis of modules by default. flask.ext builds import list dynamically. To force dynamic analysis using Python shell add flask.ext to forced builtins list.

Go to Preferences -> PyDev -> Interpreters -> Python Interpreter. Select your interpreter, go to Forced Builtins tab. Click New... and enter flask.ext.

This requires PyDev to forcefully analyze module through a shell.

For more details see PyDev manual.

share  improve this answer    answered Feb 14 '14 at 15:39 How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows?Fenikso 8,18433 gold badges3838 silver badges6868 bronze badges
  •   This looks very promising. In the mean time I switched to PyCharm, so I can't (and do not want to) test this on my own. However, I will mark this question as solved, since you're referencing to the official documentation. – floqqi Feb 14 '14 at 22:27
  • 3 This fixes Unresolved Imports for any of the flask.ext modules I've installed. Adding the Flask modules to the Python PATH did NOT fix the Unresolved Imports. – Jonathon Faust Jan 19 '15 at 19:05
  •   This looks promising, but it did not work for me in LiClipse 3.6.0 on Mac OS X 10.11. Possibly a bug in PyDev as bundled in LiClipse? – Jim DeLaHunt May 16 '17 at 23:50
  •   @JimDeLaHunt I do not use PyDev anymore, so I have no idea. – Fenikso May 17 '17 at 10:40
add a comment 2

I'm also struggling with this and the problem seems to be in the way that Flask imports the extensions. If you open the flask/ext/__init__.py file you'll see it uses importer. I don't think PyDev likes this much, so I've edited this file with the fixed imports:

import flask_login as login
import flask_sqlalchemy as sqlalchemy
import flask_wtf as wtf

def setup():
    from ..exthook import ExtensionImporter
    importer = ExtensionImporter(['flask_%s', 'flaskext.%s'], __name__)
    importer.install()


setup()
del setup

I've also found that Flask-SQLAlchemy imports broke too, so instead of doing db.Column as explained in the documentation, directly use sqlalchemy import, i.e. from sqlalchemy import Column, ForeignKey

share  improve this answer    edited May 16 '13 at 11:22     answered May 16 '13 at 10:42 How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows?Eldelshell 5,30377 gold badges3838 silver badges5959 bronze badges add a comment 1

If you have your project in a virtual environment and you want add the project in eclipse so that the project uses libraries that are installed on the virtual environment, then you should follow the following steps.

step 1: let's say the absolute path to your virtual environment is: C:\Users\sadegh\Desktop\flask_eclipse\fe\venv

How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows?

go to window->preferences->PyDev->interpretors->Python Interpretor in the Scripts directory, there is python.exe How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows? which is the python interpreter that has been assigned to this virtual environment. This executable will be the new python interpreter that we will add to eclipse.

step2: Go to window->preferences->PyDev->Interpreters->Python Interpreter How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows?

In the right pane you will see this: How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows?

click on new button then this window will pop up: How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows?

write anything you want in the Interpreter Name field and write the absolute path of the python.exe file that was mentioned in step 1 in the Interpreter Executablefield

after clicking OK this will pop up: How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows?

select all the items then click OK

step3: select the newly added interpreter in the above pane, then in the below pane go to Forced Builtin tab and click on new button on right hand side of this below pane.

How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows?

and in the window that pops up write flask.ext.

step4: everything is set now:

if you want to start a new project: when you are creating a new PyDev Project select the new Interpreter that we created as the Interpreter of this project. How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows?

if you want to convert an existing project to a flask project on your virtual environment right click on project and go to properties and in PyDev-Interpreter/Grammar change the Interpreter to the new interpreter that we have created.

note: If you want the eclipse to run the server for you in the virtual environment you can run the server from within the code that contains the Flask() instance like this:

if __name__ == '__main__': #here i assume you have put this code in a file that    
   app.run()   #contains variable "app", which contains the instance of #Flask(__main__)
share  improve this answer    answered Feb 11 '17 at 19:41 How to make eclipse/pydev happy to see flask extensions on windows?gandalf 1,87944 gold badges2222 silver badges2626 bronze badges
  •   This will add the interpreter globally for all projects, even though the interpreter in question would be a project-specific interpreter. Is there a way to add the interpreter so it is only project-specific? – FluxIX Mar 29 '17 at 16:26
add a comment 0

touch will create a blank file if it doesn't exist, or update the file's modification time if it does exist.

For this purpose, echo > /site-packages/flashext/__init__.py at a command-line should suffice. (The file won't be blank, but only contains a single newline which is semantically equivalent for Python).

share  improve this answer     
上一篇:019 mapreduce的核心--shuffle理解,以及在shuffle中的优化


下一篇:邮票面值设计