Related
I have a directory structure
├── simulate.py
├── src
│ ├── networkAlgorithm.py
│ ├── ...
And I can access the network module with sys.path.insert().
import sys
import os.path
sys.path.insert(0, "./src")
from networkAlgorithm import *
However, pycharm complains that it cannot access the module. How can I teach pycham to resolve the reference?
Manually adding it as you have done is indeed one way of doing this, but there is a simpler method, and that is by simply telling pycharm that you want to add the src folder as a source root, and then adding the sources root to your python path.
This way, you don't have to hard code things into your interpreter's settings:
Add src as a source content root:
Then make sure to add add sources to your PYTHONPATH under:
Preferences ~ Build, Execution, Deployment ~ Console ~ Python Console
Now imports will be resolved:
This way, you can add whatever you want as a source root, and things will simply work. If you unmarked it as a source root however, you will get an error:
After all this don't forget to restart. In PyCharm menu select: File --> Invalidate Caches / Restart
check for __init__.py file in src folder
add the src folder as a source root
Then make sure to add sources to your PYTHONPATH (see above)
in PyCharm menu select: File --> Invalidate Caches --> Restart
If anyone is still looking at this, the accepted answer still works for PyCharm 2016.3 when I tried it. The UI might have changed, but the options are still the same.
ie. Right click on your root folder --> 'Mark Directory As' --> Source Root
After testing all workarounds, i suggest you to take a look at Settings -> Project -> project dependencies and re-arrange them.
Normally, $PYTHONPATH is used to teach python interpreter to find necessary modules. PyCharm needs to add the path in Preference.
There are several reasons why this could be happening. Below are several steps that fixes the majority of those cases:
.idea caching issue
Some .idea issue causing the IDE to show error while the code still runs correctly. Solution:
close the project and quick PyCharm
delete the .idea folder where the project is. note that it is a hidden folder and you might not be aware of its existence in your project directory.
start PyCharm and recreate the project
imports relative not to project folder
Relative imports while code root folder is not the same as the project folder. Solution:
Find the folder that relative imports require in the project explorer
right click and mark it as "Source Root"
Editor not marking init.py as Python but as Text
Which is the most illusive of all the cases. Here, for some reason, PyCharm considers all __init__.py files not to be python files, and thus ignores them during code analysis. To fix this:
Open PyCharm settings
Navigate to Editor -> File Types
Find Python and add __init__.py to the list of python files
or
Find Text and delete __init__.py from the list of text files
The project I cloned had a directory called modules and was successfully using files from there in the code with import this as that, but Pycharm was unable to jump to those code fragments because it did not recognise the imports.
Marking the module folder in the following settings section as source solved the issue.
Generally, this is a missing package problem, just place the caret at the unresolved reference and press Alt+Enter to reveal the options, then you should know how to solve it.
Although all the answers are really helpful, there's one tiny piece of information that should be explained explicitly:
Essentially, a project with multiple hierarchical directories work as a package with some attributes.
To import custom local created Classes, we need to navigate to the directory containing .py file and create an __init__.py (empty) file there.
Why this helps is because this file is required to make Python treat the directory as containing packages. Cheers!
Install via PyCharm (works with Community Edition). Open up Settings > Project > Project Interpreter then click the green + icon in the screenshot below. In the 2nd dialogue that opens, enter the package name and click the 'Install Package' button.
After following the accepted answer, doing the following solved it for me:
File → Settings → Project <your directory/project> → Project Dependencies
Chose the directory/project where your file that has unresolved imports resides and check the box to tell Pycharm that that project depends on your other project.
My folder hierarcy is slightly different from the one in the question. Mine is like this
├── MyDirectory
│ └── simulate.py
├── src
│ ├── networkAlgorithm.py
│ ├── ...
Telling Pycharm that src depends on MyDirectory solved the issue for me!
This worked for me: Top Menu -> File -> Invalidate Caches/Restart
--> Right-click on the directory where your files are located in PyCharm
Go to the --> Mark Directory as
Select the --> Source Root
your problem will be solved
Many a times what happens is that the plugin is not installed. e.g.
If you are developing a django project and you do not have django plugin installed in pyCharm, it says error 'unresolved reference'.
Refer:
https://www.jetbrains.com/pycharm/help/resolving-references.html
I was also using a virtual environment like Dan above, however I was able to add an interpreter in the existing environment, therefore not needing to inherit global site packages and therefore undo what a virtual environment is trying to achieve.
Please check if you are using the right interpreter that you are supposed to. I was getting error "unresolved reference 'django' " to solve this I changed Project Interpreter (Changed Python 3 to Python 2.7) from project settings:
Select Project, go to File -> Settings -> Project: -> Project Interpreter -> Brows and Select correct version or Interpreter (e.g /usr/bin/python2.7).
In my case the problem was I was using Virtual environment which didn't have access to global site-packages. Thus, the interpreter was not aware of the newly installed packages.
To resolve the issue, just edit or recreate your virtual interpreter and tick the Inherit global site-packages option.
Done in PyCharm 2019.3.1
Right-click on your src folder -> "Mark Directory as" -> Click-on "Excluded" and your src folder should be blue.
I tried everything here twice and even more. I finally solved it doing something I hadn't seen anywhere online. If you go to Settings>Editor>File Types there is an 'Ignore Files and folders' line at the bottom. In my case, I was ignoring 'venv', which is what I always name my virtual environments. So I removed venv; from the list of directories to ignore and VOILA!! I was FINALLY able to fix this problem. Literally all of my import problems were fixed for the project.
BTW, I had installed each and every package using PyCharm, and not through a terminal. (Meaning, by going to Settings>Interpreter...). I had invalidated cache, changed 'Source Root', restarted PyCharm, refreshed my interpreters paths, changed interpreters, deleted my venv... I tried everything. This finally worked. Obviously there are multiple problems going on here with different people, so this may not work for you, but it's definitely worth a shot if nothing else has worked, and easy to reverse if it doesn't.
For my case :
Directory0
├── Directory1
│ └── file1.py
├── Directory2
│ ├── file2.py
Into file1, I have :
from Directory2 import file2
which trows an "unresolved reference Directory2".
I resolved it by:
marking the parent directory Directory0 as "Source Root" like said above
AND
putting my cursor on another line on the file where I had the error so that it takes my modification into account
It is silly but if I don't do the second action, the error still appears and can make you think that you didn't resolve the issue by marking the parent directory as Source Root.
For me, adding virtualenv (venv)'s site-packages path to the paths of the interpreter works.
Finally!
I had the same problem and also try so many suggestions but none of them worked, until I find this post (https://stackoverflow.com/a/62632870/16863617). Regardless his solution didn't work for me, it helped me to came up with the idea to add _init.py_ into the --> Settings | Editor | File Types | Python | Registered patterns
ScreenShot
And the unresolved reference error is now solved.
just note if u have a problem with python interpreter not installing
packages, just change the permission for folder PycharmProjects
C:\Users'username'\PycharmProjects
to every one
This problem also appears if you use a dash within the Python filename, which therefore is strongly discouraged.
I encountered an import problem when installing aiogram. At the same time, the bot worked, but pyCharm highlighted the import in red and did not give hints. I've tried all of the above many times.As a result, the following helped me: I found the aiogram folder at the following path
c\Users...\AppData\Roaming\Python\Python310\site-packages
and copied it to the folder
C:\Program Files\Python310\Lib\site-packages
After that, I reset pyCharm and that's it!
In my case, with Pycharm 2019.3, the problem was that I forgot to add the extension '.py' to the file I wanted to import. Once added, the error went away without needing to invalides caches or any other step.
Pycharm uses venv. In the venv's console you should install the packages explicitly or go in settings -> project interpreter -> add interpreter -> inherit global site-packages.
The easiest way to fix it is by doing the following in your pyCharm software:
Click on: File > Settings > (Project: your project name) > Project Interpreter >
then click on the "+" icon on the right side to search for the package you want and install it.
Enjoy coding !!!
In newer versions of pycharm u can do simply by right clicking on the directory or python package from which you want to import a file, then click on 'Mark Directory As' -> 'Sources Root'
I have a directory structure
├── simulate.py
├── src
│ ├── networkAlgorithm.py
│ ├── ...
And I can access the network module with sys.path.insert().
import sys
import os.path
sys.path.insert(0, "./src")
from networkAlgorithm import *
However, pycharm complains that it cannot access the module. How can I teach pycham to resolve the reference?
Manually adding it as you have done is indeed one way of doing this, but there is a simpler method, and that is by simply telling pycharm that you want to add the src folder as a source root, and then adding the sources root to your python path.
This way, you don't have to hard code things into your interpreter's settings:
Add src as a source content root:
Then make sure to add add sources to your PYTHONPATH under:
Preferences ~ Build, Execution, Deployment ~ Console ~ Python Console
Now imports will be resolved:
This way, you can add whatever you want as a source root, and things will simply work. If you unmarked it as a source root however, you will get an error:
After all this don't forget to restart. In PyCharm menu select: File --> Invalidate Caches / Restart
check for __init__.py file in src folder
add the src folder as a source root
Then make sure to add sources to your PYTHONPATH (see above)
in PyCharm menu select: File --> Invalidate Caches --> Restart
If anyone is still looking at this, the accepted answer still works for PyCharm 2016.3 when I tried it. The UI might have changed, but the options are still the same.
ie. Right click on your root folder --> 'Mark Directory As' --> Source Root
After testing all workarounds, i suggest you to take a look at Settings -> Project -> project dependencies and re-arrange them.
Normally, $PYTHONPATH is used to teach python interpreter to find necessary modules. PyCharm needs to add the path in Preference.
There are several reasons why this could be happening. Below are several steps that fixes the majority of those cases:
.idea caching issue
Some .idea issue causing the IDE to show error while the code still runs correctly. Solution:
close the project and quick PyCharm
delete the .idea folder where the project is. note that it is a hidden folder and you might not be aware of its existence in your project directory.
start PyCharm and recreate the project
imports relative not to project folder
Relative imports while code root folder is not the same as the project folder. Solution:
Find the folder that relative imports require in the project explorer
right click and mark it as "Source Root"
Editor not marking init.py as Python but as Text
Which is the most illusive of all the cases. Here, for some reason, PyCharm considers all __init__.py files not to be python files, and thus ignores them during code analysis. To fix this:
Open PyCharm settings
Navigate to Editor -> File Types
Find Python and add __init__.py to the list of python files
or
Find Text and delete __init__.py from the list of text files
The project I cloned had a directory called modules and was successfully using files from there in the code with import this as that, but Pycharm was unable to jump to those code fragments because it did not recognise the imports.
Marking the module folder in the following settings section as source solved the issue.
Generally, this is a missing package problem, just place the caret at the unresolved reference and press Alt+Enter to reveal the options, then you should know how to solve it.
Although all the answers are really helpful, there's one tiny piece of information that should be explained explicitly:
Essentially, a project with multiple hierarchical directories work as a package with some attributes.
To import custom local created Classes, we need to navigate to the directory containing .py file and create an __init__.py (empty) file there.
Why this helps is because this file is required to make Python treat the directory as containing packages. Cheers!
Install via PyCharm (works with Community Edition). Open up Settings > Project > Project Interpreter then click the green + icon in the screenshot below. In the 2nd dialogue that opens, enter the package name and click the 'Install Package' button.
After following the accepted answer, doing the following solved it for me:
File → Settings → Project <your directory/project> → Project Dependencies
Chose the directory/project where your file that has unresolved imports resides and check the box to tell Pycharm that that project depends on your other project.
My folder hierarcy is slightly different from the one in the question. Mine is like this
├── MyDirectory
│ └── simulate.py
├── src
│ ├── networkAlgorithm.py
│ ├── ...
Telling Pycharm that src depends on MyDirectory solved the issue for me!
This worked for me: Top Menu -> File -> Invalidate Caches/Restart
--> Right-click on the directory where your files are located in PyCharm
Go to the --> Mark Directory as
Select the --> Source Root
your problem will be solved
Many a times what happens is that the plugin is not installed. e.g.
If you are developing a django project and you do not have django plugin installed in pyCharm, it says error 'unresolved reference'.
Refer:
https://www.jetbrains.com/pycharm/help/resolving-references.html
I was also using a virtual environment like Dan above, however I was able to add an interpreter in the existing environment, therefore not needing to inherit global site packages and therefore undo what a virtual environment is trying to achieve.
Please check if you are using the right interpreter that you are supposed to. I was getting error "unresolved reference 'django' " to solve this I changed Project Interpreter (Changed Python 3 to Python 2.7) from project settings:
Select Project, go to File -> Settings -> Project: -> Project Interpreter -> Brows and Select correct version or Interpreter (e.g /usr/bin/python2.7).
In my case the problem was I was using Virtual environment which didn't have access to global site-packages. Thus, the interpreter was not aware of the newly installed packages.
To resolve the issue, just edit or recreate your virtual interpreter and tick the Inherit global site-packages option.
Done in PyCharm 2019.3.1
Right-click on your src folder -> "Mark Directory as" -> Click-on "Excluded" and your src folder should be blue.
I tried everything here twice and even more. I finally solved it doing something I hadn't seen anywhere online. If you go to Settings>Editor>File Types there is an 'Ignore Files and folders' line at the bottom. In my case, I was ignoring 'venv', which is what I always name my virtual environments. So I removed venv; from the list of directories to ignore and VOILA!! I was FINALLY able to fix this problem. Literally all of my import problems were fixed for the project.
BTW, I had installed each and every package using PyCharm, and not through a terminal. (Meaning, by going to Settings>Interpreter...). I had invalidated cache, changed 'Source Root', restarted PyCharm, refreshed my interpreters paths, changed interpreters, deleted my venv... I tried everything. This finally worked. Obviously there are multiple problems going on here with different people, so this may not work for you, but it's definitely worth a shot if nothing else has worked, and easy to reverse if it doesn't.
For my case :
Directory0
├── Directory1
│ └── file1.py
├── Directory2
│ ├── file2.py
Into file1, I have :
from Directory2 import file2
which trows an "unresolved reference Directory2".
I resolved it by:
marking the parent directory Directory0 as "Source Root" like said above
AND
putting my cursor on another line on the file where I had the error so that it takes my modification into account
It is silly but if I don't do the second action, the error still appears and can make you think that you didn't resolve the issue by marking the parent directory as Source Root.
For me, adding virtualenv (venv)'s site-packages path to the paths of the interpreter works.
Finally!
I had the same problem and also try so many suggestions but none of them worked, until I find this post (https://stackoverflow.com/a/62632870/16863617). Regardless his solution didn't work for me, it helped me to came up with the idea to add _init.py_ into the --> Settings | Editor | File Types | Python | Registered patterns
ScreenShot
And the unresolved reference error is now solved.
just note if u have a problem with python interpreter not installing
packages, just change the permission for folder PycharmProjects
C:\Users'username'\PycharmProjects
to every one
This problem also appears if you use a dash within the Python filename, which therefore is strongly discouraged.
I encountered an import problem when installing aiogram. At the same time, the bot worked, but pyCharm highlighted the import in red and did not give hints. I've tried all of the above many times.As a result, the following helped me: I found the aiogram folder at the following path
c\Users...\AppData\Roaming\Python\Python310\site-packages
and copied it to the folder
C:\Program Files\Python310\Lib\site-packages
After that, I reset pyCharm and that's it!
In my case, with Pycharm 2019.3, the problem was that I forgot to add the extension '.py' to the file I wanted to import. Once added, the error went away without needing to invalides caches or any other step.
Pycharm uses venv. In the venv's console you should install the packages explicitly or go in settings -> project interpreter -> add interpreter -> inherit global site-packages.
The easiest way to fix it is by doing the following in your pyCharm software:
Click on: File > Settings > (Project: your project name) > Project Interpreter >
then click on the "+" icon on the right side to search for the package you want and install it.
Enjoy coding !!!
In newer versions of pycharm u can do simply by right clicking on the directory or python package from which you want to import a file, then click on 'Mark Directory As' -> 'Sources Root'
I have a directory structure
├── simulate.py
├── src
│ ├── networkAlgorithm.py
│ ├── ...
And I can access the network module with sys.path.insert().
import sys
import os.path
sys.path.insert(0, "./src")
from networkAlgorithm import *
However, pycharm complains that it cannot access the module. How can I teach pycham to resolve the reference?
Manually adding it as you have done is indeed one way of doing this, but there is a simpler method, and that is by simply telling pycharm that you want to add the src folder as a source root, and then adding the sources root to your python path.
This way, you don't have to hard code things into your interpreter's settings:
Add src as a source content root:
Then make sure to add add sources to your PYTHONPATH under:
Preferences ~ Build, Execution, Deployment ~ Console ~ Python Console
Now imports will be resolved:
This way, you can add whatever you want as a source root, and things will simply work. If you unmarked it as a source root however, you will get an error:
After all this don't forget to restart. In PyCharm menu select: File --> Invalidate Caches / Restart
check for __init__.py file in src folder
add the src folder as a source root
Then make sure to add sources to your PYTHONPATH (see above)
in PyCharm menu select: File --> Invalidate Caches --> Restart
If anyone is still looking at this, the accepted answer still works for PyCharm 2016.3 when I tried it. The UI might have changed, but the options are still the same.
ie. Right click on your root folder --> 'Mark Directory As' --> Source Root
After testing all workarounds, i suggest you to take a look at Settings -> Project -> project dependencies and re-arrange them.
Normally, $PYTHONPATH is used to teach python interpreter to find necessary modules. PyCharm needs to add the path in Preference.
There are several reasons why this could be happening. Below are several steps that fixes the majority of those cases:
.idea caching issue
Some .idea issue causing the IDE to show error while the code still runs correctly. Solution:
close the project and quick PyCharm
delete the .idea folder where the project is. note that it is a hidden folder and you might not be aware of its existence in your project directory.
start PyCharm and recreate the project
imports relative not to project folder
Relative imports while code root folder is not the same as the project folder. Solution:
Find the folder that relative imports require in the project explorer
right click and mark it as "Source Root"
Editor not marking init.py as Python but as Text
Which is the most illusive of all the cases. Here, for some reason, PyCharm considers all __init__.py files not to be python files, and thus ignores them during code analysis. To fix this:
Open PyCharm settings
Navigate to Editor -> File Types
Find Python and add __init__.py to the list of python files
or
Find Text and delete __init__.py from the list of text files
The project I cloned had a directory called modules and was successfully using files from there in the code with import this as that, but Pycharm was unable to jump to those code fragments because it did not recognise the imports.
Marking the module folder in the following settings section as source solved the issue.
Generally, this is a missing package problem, just place the caret at the unresolved reference and press Alt+Enter to reveal the options, then you should know how to solve it.
Although all the answers are really helpful, there's one tiny piece of information that should be explained explicitly:
Essentially, a project with multiple hierarchical directories work as a package with some attributes.
To import custom local created Classes, we need to navigate to the directory containing .py file and create an __init__.py (empty) file there.
Why this helps is because this file is required to make Python treat the directory as containing packages. Cheers!
Install via PyCharm (works with Community Edition). Open up Settings > Project > Project Interpreter then click the green + icon in the screenshot below. In the 2nd dialogue that opens, enter the package name and click the 'Install Package' button.
After following the accepted answer, doing the following solved it for me:
File → Settings → Project <your directory/project> → Project Dependencies
Chose the directory/project where your file that has unresolved imports resides and check the box to tell Pycharm that that project depends on your other project.
My folder hierarcy is slightly different from the one in the question. Mine is like this
├── MyDirectory
│ └── simulate.py
├── src
│ ├── networkAlgorithm.py
│ ├── ...
Telling Pycharm that src depends on MyDirectory solved the issue for me!
This worked for me: Top Menu -> File -> Invalidate Caches/Restart
--> Right-click on the directory where your files are located in PyCharm
Go to the --> Mark Directory as
Select the --> Source Root
your problem will be solved
Many a times what happens is that the plugin is not installed. e.g.
If you are developing a django project and you do not have django plugin installed in pyCharm, it says error 'unresolved reference'.
Refer:
https://www.jetbrains.com/pycharm/help/resolving-references.html
I was also using a virtual environment like Dan above, however I was able to add an interpreter in the existing environment, therefore not needing to inherit global site packages and therefore undo what a virtual environment is trying to achieve.
Please check if you are using the right interpreter that you are supposed to. I was getting error "unresolved reference 'django' " to solve this I changed Project Interpreter (Changed Python 3 to Python 2.7) from project settings:
Select Project, go to File -> Settings -> Project: -> Project Interpreter -> Brows and Select correct version or Interpreter (e.g /usr/bin/python2.7).
In my case the problem was I was using Virtual environment which didn't have access to global site-packages. Thus, the interpreter was not aware of the newly installed packages.
To resolve the issue, just edit or recreate your virtual interpreter and tick the Inherit global site-packages option.
Done in PyCharm 2019.3.1
Right-click on your src folder -> "Mark Directory as" -> Click-on "Excluded" and your src folder should be blue.
I tried everything here twice and even more. I finally solved it doing something I hadn't seen anywhere online. If you go to Settings>Editor>File Types there is an 'Ignore Files and folders' line at the bottom. In my case, I was ignoring 'venv', which is what I always name my virtual environments. So I removed venv; from the list of directories to ignore and VOILA!! I was FINALLY able to fix this problem. Literally all of my import problems were fixed for the project.
BTW, I had installed each and every package using PyCharm, and not through a terminal. (Meaning, by going to Settings>Interpreter...). I had invalidated cache, changed 'Source Root', restarted PyCharm, refreshed my interpreters paths, changed interpreters, deleted my venv... I tried everything. This finally worked. Obviously there are multiple problems going on here with different people, so this may not work for you, but it's definitely worth a shot if nothing else has worked, and easy to reverse if it doesn't.
For my case :
Directory0
├── Directory1
│ └── file1.py
├── Directory2
│ ├── file2.py
Into file1, I have :
from Directory2 import file2
which trows an "unresolved reference Directory2".
I resolved it by:
marking the parent directory Directory0 as "Source Root" like said above
AND
putting my cursor on another line on the file where I had the error so that it takes my modification into account
It is silly but if I don't do the second action, the error still appears and can make you think that you didn't resolve the issue by marking the parent directory as Source Root.
For me, adding virtualenv (venv)'s site-packages path to the paths of the interpreter works.
Finally!
I had the same problem and also try so many suggestions but none of them worked, until I find this post (https://stackoverflow.com/a/62632870/16863617). Regardless his solution didn't work for me, it helped me to came up with the idea to add _init.py_ into the --> Settings | Editor | File Types | Python | Registered patterns
ScreenShot
And the unresolved reference error is now solved.
just note if u have a problem with python interpreter not installing
packages, just change the permission for folder PycharmProjects
C:\Users'username'\PycharmProjects
to every one
This problem also appears if you use a dash within the Python filename, which therefore is strongly discouraged.
I encountered an import problem when installing aiogram. At the same time, the bot worked, but pyCharm highlighted the import in red and did not give hints. I've tried all of the above many times.As a result, the following helped me: I found the aiogram folder at the following path
c\Users...\AppData\Roaming\Python\Python310\site-packages
and copied it to the folder
C:\Program Files\Python310\Lib\site-packages
After that, I reset pyCharm and that's it!
In my case, with Pycharm 2019.3, the problem was that I forgot to add the extension '.py' to the file I wanted to import. Once added, the error went away without needing to invalides caches or any other step.
Pycharm uses venv. In the venv's console you should install the packages explicitly or go in settings -> project interpreter -> add interpreter -> inherit global site-packages.
The easiest way to fix it is by doing the following in your pyCharm software:
Click on: File > Settings > (Project: your project name) > Project Interpreter >
then click on the "+" icon on the right side to search for the package you want and install it.
Enjoy coding !!!
In newer versions of pycharm u can do simply by right clicking on the directory or python package from which you want to import a file, then click on 'Mark Directory As' -> 'Sources Root'
I have a directory structure
├── simulate.py
├── src
│ ├── networkAlgorithm.py
│ ├── ...
And I can access the network module with sys.path.insert().
import sys
import os.path
sys.path.insert(0, "./src")
from networkAlgorithm import *
However, pycharm complains that it cannot access the module. How can I teach pycham to resolve the reference?
Manually adding it as you have done is indeed one way of doing this, but there is a simpler method, and that is by simply telling pycharm that you want to add the src folder as a source root, and then adding the sources root to your python path.
This way, you don't have to hard code things into your interpreter's settings:
Add src as a source content root:
Then make sure to add add sources to your PYTHONPATH under:
Preferences ~ Build, Execution, Deployment ~ Console ~ Python Console
Now imports will be resolved:
This way, you can add whatever you want as a source root, and things will simply work. If you unmarked it as a source root however, you will get an error:
After all this don't forget to restart. In PyCharm menu select: File --> Invalidate Caches / Restart
check for __init__.py file in src folder
add the src folder as a source root
Then make sure to add sources to your PYTHONPATH (see above)
in PyCharm menu select: File --> Invalidate Caches --> Restart
If anyone is still looking at this, the accepted answer still works for PyCharm 2016.3 when I tried it. The UI might have changed, but the options are still the same.
ie. Right click on your root folder --> 'Mark Directory As' --> Source Root
After testing all workarounds, i suggest you to take a look at Settings -> Project -> project dependencies and re-arrange them.
Normally, $PYTHONPATH is used to teach python interpreter to find necessary modules. PyCharm needs to add the path in Preference.
There are several reasons why this could be happening. Below are several steps that fixes the majority of those cases:
.idea caching issue
Some .idea issue causing the IDE to show error while the code still runs correctly. Solution:
close the project and quick PyCharm
delete the .idea folder where the project is. note that it is a hidden folder and you might not be aware of its existence in your project directory.
start PyCharm and recreate the project
imports relative not to project folder
Relative imports while code root folder is not the same as the project folder. Solution:
Find the folder that relative imports require in the project explorer
right click and mark it as "Source Root"
Editor not marking init.py as Python but as Text
Which is the most illusive of all the cases. Here, for some reason, PyCharm considers all __init__.py files not to be python files, and thus ignores them during code analysis. To fix this:
Open PyCharm settings
Navigate to Editor -> File Types
Find Python and add __init__.py to the list of python files
or
Find Text and delete __init__.py from the list of text files
The project I cloned had a directory called modules and was successfully using files from there in the code with import this as that, but Pycharm was unable to jump to those code fragments because it did not recognise the imports.
Marking the module folder in the following settings section as source solved the issue.
Generally, this is a missing package problem, just place the caret at the unresolved reference and press Alt+Enter to reveal the options, then you should know how to solve it.
Although all the answers are really helpful, there's one tiny piece of information that should be explained explicitly:
Essentially, a project with multiple hierarchical directories work as a package with some attributes.
To import custom local created Classes, we need to navigate to the directory containing .py file and create an __init__.py (empty) file there.
Why this helps is because this file is required to make Python treat the directory as containing packages. Cheers!
Install via PyCharm (works with Community Edition). Open up Settings > Project > Project Interpreter then click the green + icon in the screenshot below. In the 2nd dialogue that opens, enter the package name and click the 'Install Package' button.
After following the accepted answer, doing the following solved it for me:
File → Settings → Project <your directory/project> → Project Dependencies
Chose the directory/project where your file that has unresolved imports resides and check the box to tell Pycharm that that project depends on your other project.
My folder hierarcy is slightly different from the one in the question. Mine is like this
├── MyDirectory
│ └── simulate.py
├── src
│ ├── networkAlgorithm.py
│ ├── ...
Telling Pycharm that src depends on MyDirectory solved the issue for me!
This worked for me: Top Menu -> File -> Invalidate Caches/Restart
--> Right-click on the directory where your files are located in PyCharm
Go to the --> Mark Directory as
Select the --> Source Root
your problem will be solved
Many a times what happens is that the plugin is not installed. e.g.
If you are developing a django project and you do not have django plugin installed in pyCharm, it says error 'unresolved reference'.
Refer:
https://www.jetbrains.com/pycharm/help/resolving-references.html
I was also using a virtual environment like Dan above, however I was able to add an interpreter in the existing environment, therefore not needing to inherit global site packages and therefore undo what a virtual environment is trying to achieve.
Please check if you are using the right interpreter that you are supposed to. I was getting error "unresolved reference 'django' " to solve this I changed Project Interpreter (Changed Python 3 to Python 2.7) from project settings:
Select Project, go to File -> Settings -> Project: -> Project Interpreter -> Brows and Select correct version or Interpreter (e.g /usr/bin/python2.7).
In my case the problem was I was using Virtual environment which didn't have access to global site-packages. Thus, the interpreter was not aware of the newly installed packages.
To resolve the issue, just edit or recreate your virtual interpreter and tick the Inherit global site-packages option.
Done in PyCharm 2019.3.1
Right-click on your src folder -> "Mark Directory as" -> Click-on "Excluded" and your src folder should be blue.
I tried everything here twice and even more. I finally solved it doing something I hadn't seen anywhere online. If you go to Settings>Editor>File Types there is an 'Ignore Files and folders' line at the bottom. In my case, I was ignoring 'venv', which is what I always name my virtual environments. So I removed venv; from the list of directories to ignore and VOILA!! I was FINALLY able to fix this problem. Literally all of my import problems were fixed for the project.
BTW, I had installed each and every package using PyCharm, and not through a terminal. (Meaning, by going to Settings>Interpreter...). I had invalidated cache, changed 'Source Root', restarted PyCharm, refreshed my interpreters paths, changed interpreters, deleted my venv... I tried everything. This finally worked. Obviously there are multiple problems going on here with different people, so this may not work for you, but it's definitely worth a shot if nothing else has worked, and easy to reverse if it doesn't.
For my case :
Directory0
├── Directory1
│ └── file1.py
├── Directory2
│ ├── file2.py
Into file1, I have :
from Directory2 import file2
which trows an "unresolved reference Directory2".
I resolved it by:
marking the parent directory Directory0 as "Source Root" like said above
AND
putting my cursor on another line on the file where I had the error so that it takes my modification into account
It is silly but if I don't do the second action, the error still appears and can make you think that you didn't resolve the issue by marking the parent directory as Source Root.
For me, adding virtualenv (venv)'s site-packages path to the paths of the interpreter works.
Finally!
I had the same problem and also try so many suggestions but none of them worked, until I find this post (https://stackoverflow.com/a/62632870/16863617). Regardless his solution didn't work for me, it helped me to came up with the idea to add _init.py_ into the --> Settings | Editor | File Types | Python | Registered patterns
ScreenShot
And the unresolved reference error is now solved.
just note if u have a problem with python interpreter not installing
packages, just change the permission for folder PycharmProjects
C:\Users'username'\PycharmProjects
to every one
This problem also appears if you use a dash within the Python filename, which therefore is strongly discouraged.
I encountered an import problem when installing aiogram. At the same time, the bot worked, but pyCharm highlighted the import in red and did not give hints. I've tried all of the above many times.As a result, the following helped me: I found the aiogram folder at the following path
c\Users...\AppData\Roaming\Python\Python310\site-packages
and copied it to the folder
C:\Program Files\Python310\Lib\site-packages
After that, I reset pyCharm and that's it!
In my case, with Pycharm 2019.3, the problem was that I forgot to add the extension '.py' to the file I wanted to import. Once added, the error went away without needing to invalides caches or any other step.
Pycharm uses venv. In the venv's console you should install the packages explicitly or go in settings -> project interpreter -> add interpreter -> inherit global site-packages.
The easiest way to fix it is by doing the following in your pyCharm software:
Click on: File > Settings > (Project: your project name) > Project Interpreter >
then click on the "+" icon on the right side to search for the package you want and install it.
Enjoy coding !!!
In newer versions of pycharm u can do simply by right clicking on the directory or python package from which you want to import a file, then click on 'Mark Directory As' -> 'Sources Root'
In my code I get this error telling me that it doesn't recognise my imports:
This has kind of fixed the problem, in VSCode, instead of opening a large folder which has other sub folder, I opened only 1 of the folders:
I am not sure what is causing this problem as, the code which I have written uses data and functions in the files from utils folder. This means that my app is running flawlessly with no errors even though I am getting this unresolved import warning. Is there any way to fix this? Thanks a lot and I really appreciate your help!
My app crashes when I say .utils.constants as it says that there is no parent package / module.
Here is my complete file structure in VSCode:
The happened with PyCharm:
I assume, Pycharm is not identifying the source root of the project. You can select the Local Memory directory as source root.
You can follow these steps to select the Local Memory as source root in Pycharm:
Right click on the Local Memory from Project sidebar.
Click on Mark Directory as > Sources root.
You do not need to add . before utils in import statement.
Demonstration:
I have removed similar unresolved import error from Pycharm.
Before selecting a directory as Source root, I was getting the unresolved import error in Pycharm like below:
Then I marked the utils folder as source root and the error is fixed. After the source root mark, the folder icon is shown as a blue folder icon like below:
Reference:
Pycharm documentation on Content root types
There is a problem with Pycharm.
If you want to remove the error Pycharm must scan for files to index
After indexing it will update the python interpreter then it should work !
Good luck