Mac Python Visual Studio Code



In this Python Programming Tutorial, we will be learning how to set up a Python development environment in VSCode on MacOS. VSCode is a very nice free editor. Install Visual Studio Code. One of the good things of this IDE is that allows us to run Jupyter notebooks within itself. Follow the Set-up instructions and then install python and the VSCode Python extension. Then, open a new terminal and install the pyspark package via pip $ pip install pyspark.

We are pleased to announce that the March 2021 release of the Python Extension for Visual Studio Code is now available. This release largely focused on bug fixes and stabilization work in our Python, Pylance and Jupyter extensions, and includes a preview of improved Jedi language server support for our Python Insiders.

Dear Readers,

In this post, I will explain steps to Install Visual Studio Code and the Python Extension on MAC.

Drag Visual Studio Code.app to the Applications folder, making it available in the macOS Launchpad. Add VS Code to your Dock by right-clicking on the icon to bring up the context menu and choosing Options, Keep in Dock. Launching from the command line # You can also run VS Code from the terminal by typing 'code' after adding it to the path. I'm running VS Code 1.33.1 on macOS Sierra (10.12.6). When I run a simple Python program like the following, VS Code uses Python 2.7 as installed on my Mac rather than Python 3 which I installed using Homebrew. # show-python-version.py import sys print(sys.version) Here's the output as displayed in the VS Code Output window.

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We need three things to install Visual Studio Code and the Python Extension on MAC

  • VS Code
  • VS Code Python extension
  • Python 3

Step 1 – Install VS Code

1. Go To URL https://code.visualstudio.com

2. Click Download for MAC

3. Unzip the file you will get “Visual Studio Code.app”. Double click.

4. Click Open if below mentioned window pops up

Step 2 – Install Python Extension for VS Code

  1. Next, install the Python extension for VS Code from the Visual Studio Marketplace.

2. Click Continue – Visual Studio Code is required to install the extension

3. Click Open Visual Studio Code after clicking the optional checkbox for always allowing the market place to open visual studio code.

4. Click OK

5. Click Install

>> Installing

>> Installed

>> You may see this error in the bottom

Step 3 – Install a Python interpreter

Along with the Python extension, you need to install a Python interpreter. Which interpreter you use is dependent on your specific needs, but some guidance is provided below.

1. On macOS, make sure the location of your VS Code installation is included in your PATH environment variable.

Click “Command + Shift + P”

On the search tab – type ” shell command” > Install code command in path will appear – click on that

Click OK

Enter Password

The system install of Python on macOS is not supported. Instead, an installation through Homebrew is recommended.

2. Install Homebrew

To install Home Brew in MAC- Run this command on terminal

Enter password

Once it is installed, you will see below messages

Step 4 Install Python

To install Python using Homebrew on macOS use brew install python at the Terminal prompt.

Step 5 Verify the Python installation

To verify that you’ve installed Python successfully on your machine, run one of the following command :

python3 –version

If the installation was successful, the output window should show the version of Python that you installed.

I faced a issue here – It was showing old version of my python

I used below command to resolve it, but unsuccessful

$ brew install pyenv

$ pyenv install 3.8.5

$ pyenv global 3.8.5

$ pyenv version

It was again showing the same version

Now I tried

brew link python@3.8

It was showing error – so I removed few files

rm ‘/usr/local/bin/2to3’

Mac Python Visual Studio Code

rm ‘/usr/local/bin/idle3’

rm ‘/usr/local/bin/pydoc3’

rm ‘/usr/local/bin/python3’

rm ‘/usr/local/bin/python3-config’

And finally I run the command again and it was successful

ravidubey@Ravis-MacBook-Pro ~ % brew link python@3.8

Linking /usr/local/Cellar/python@3.8/3.8.5… 25 symlinks created

ravidubey@Ravis-MacBook-Pro ~ % python3 –version

Python 3.8.5

Step 6 Start VS Code in a project (workspace) folder

Using a command prompt or terminal, create an empty folder called “hello”, navigate into it, and open VS Code (code) in that folder (.) by entering the following commands:

In case you face issue, run this command

  • Move Visual Studio .app file from any location to application folder
  • Remove the current link with sudo rm /usr/local/bin/code
  • Start Visual Studio from within /Applications
  • Now open the Command Palette (F1 or ⇧⌘P on Mac) and type shell command to find the Shell Command: Install 'code' command in PATH command.

By starting VS Code in a folder, that folder becomes your “workspace”. VS Code stores settings that are specific to that workspace in .vscode/settings.json, which are separate from user settings that are stored globally.

Alternately, you can run VS Code through the operating system UI, then use File > Open Folder to open the project folder.

Step 7 Select a Python interpreter

Python is an interpreted language, and in order to run Python code and get Python IntelliSense, you must tell VS Code which interpreter to use.

From within VS Code, select a Python 3 interpreter by opening the Command Palette (⇧⌘P), start typing the Python: Select Interpreter command to search, then select the command. You can also use the Select Python Environment option on the Status Bar if available (it may already show a selected interpreter, too):

The command presents a list of available interpreters that VS Code can find automatically, including virtual environments. If you don’t see the desired interpreter, see Configuring Python environments.

Note: When using an Anaconda distribution, the correct interpreter should have the suffix ('base':conda), for example Python 3.7.3 64-bit ('base':conda)

Selecting an interpreter sets the python.pythonPath value in your workspace settings to the path of the interpreter. To see the setting, select File > Preferences > Settings (Code > Preferences > Settings on macOS), then select the Workspace Settings tab.

Note: If you select an interpreter without a workspace folder open, VS Code sets python.pythonPath in your user settings instead, which sets the default interpreter for VS Code in general. The user setting makes sure you always have a default interpreter for Python projects. The workspace settings lets you override the user setting.

Step 8 Create a Python Hello World source code file

From the File Explorer toolbar, select the New File button on the hello folder:

Name the file hello.py, and it automatically opens in the editor:

By using the .py file extension, you tell VS Code to interpret this file as a Python program, so that it evaluates the contents with the Python extension and the selected interpreter.

Note: The File Explorer toolbar also allows you to create folders within your workspace to better organize your code. You can use the New folder button to quickly create a folder.

Now that you have a code file in your Workspace, enter the following source code in hello.py:

When you start typing print, notice how IntelliSense presents auto-completion options.

IntelliSense and auto-completions work for standard Python modules as well as other packages you’ve installed into the environment of the selected Python interpreter. It also provides completions for methods available on object types. For example, because the msg variable contains a string, IntelliSense provides string methods when you type msg.:

Feel free to experiment with IntelliSense some more, but then revert your changes so you have only the msg variable and the print call, and save the file (⌘S).

For full details on editing, formatting, and refactoring, see Editing code. The Python extension also has full support for Linting.

You may have to install pylint using the command

brew install pylint

Step 9 Run Hello World

It’s simple to run hello.py with Python. Just click the Run Python File in Terminal play button in the top-right side of the editor.

The button opens a terminal panel in which your Python interpreter is automatically activated, then runs python3 hello.py (macOS/Linux) or python hello.py (Windows):

There are three other ways you can run Python code within VS Code:

  • Right-click anywhere in the editor window and select Run Python File in Terminal (which saves the file automatically):
  • Select one or more lines, then press Shift+Enter or right-click and select Run Selection/Line in Python Terminal. This command is convenient for testing just a part of a file.
  • From the Command Palette (⇧⌘P), select the Python: Start REPL command to open a REPL terminal for the currently selected Python interpreter. In the REPL, you can then enter and run lines of code one at a time.

Step 10 Configure and run the debugger#

Let’s now try debugging our simple Hello World program.

First, set a breakpoint on line 2 of hello.py by placing the cursor on the print call and pressing F9. Alternately, just click in the editor’s left gutter, next to the line numbers. When you set a breakpoint, a red circle appears in the gutter.

Next, to initialize the debugger, press F5. Since this is your first time debugging this file, a configuration menu will open from the Command Palette allowing you to select the type of debug configuration you would like for the opened file.

Note: VS Code uses JSON files for all of its various configurations; launch.json is the standard name for a file containing debugging configurations.

These different configurations are fully explained in Debugging configurations; for now, just select Python File, which is the configuration that runs the current file shown in the editor using the currently selected Python interpreter.

The debugger will stop at the first line of the file breakpoint. The current line is indicated with a yellow arrow in the left margin. If you examine the Local variables window at this point, you will see now defined msg variable appears in the Local pane.

A debug toolbar appears along the top with the following commands from left to right: continue (F5), step over (F10), step into (F11), step out (⇧F11), restart (⇧⌘F5), and stop (⇧F5).

The Status Bar also changes color (orange in many themes) to indicate that you’re in debug mode. The Python Debug Console also appears automatically in the lower right panel to show the commands being run, along with the program output.

To continue running the program, select the continue command on the debug toolbar (F5). The debugger runs the program to the end.

Tip Debugging information can also be seen by hovering over code, such as variables. In the case of msg, hovering over the variable will display the string Hello world in a box above the variable.

You can also work with variables in the Debug Console (If you don’t see it, select Debug Console in the lower right area of VS Code, or select it from the menu.) Then try entering the following lines, one by one, at the > prompt at the bottom of the console:

Select the blue Continue button on the toolbar again (or press F5) to run the program to completion. “Hello World” appears in the Python Debug Console if you switch back to it, and VS Code exits debugging mode once the program is complete.

If you restart the debugger, the debugger again stops on the first breakpoint.

To stop running a program before it’s complete, use the red square stop button on the debug toolbar (⇧F5), or use the Run > Stop debugging menu command.

For full details, see Debugging configurations, which includes notes on how to use a specific Python interpreter for debugging.

Tip: Use Logpoints instead of print statements: Developers often litter source code with print statements to quickly inspect variables without necessarily stepping through each line of code in a debugger. In VS Code, you can instead use Logpoints. A Logpoint is like a breakpoint except that it logs a message to the console and doesn’t stop the program. For more information, see Logpoints in the main VS Code debugging article.

Step 11 Install and use packages

Let’s now run an example that’s a little more interesting. In Python, packages are how you obtain any number of useful code libraries, typically from PyPI. For this example, you use the matplotlib and numpy packages to create a graphical plot as is commonly done with data science. (Note that matplotlib cannot show graphs when running in the Windows Subsystem for Linux as it lacks the necessary UI support.)

Return to the Explorer view (the top-most icon on the left side, which shows files), create a new file called standardplot.py, and paste in the following source code:

Tip: If you enter the above code by hand, you may find that auto-completions change the names after the as keywords when you press Enter at the end of a line. To avoid this, type a space, then Enter.

Next, try running the file in the debugger using the “Python: Current file” configuration as described in the last section.

Unless you’re using an Anaconda distribution or have previously installed the matplotlib package, you should see the message, “ModuleNotFoundError: No module named ‘matplotlib'”. Such a message indicates that the required package isn’t available in your system.

To install the matplotlib package (which also installs numpy as a dependency), stop the debugger and use the Command Palette to run Terminal: Create New Integrated Terminal (⌃⇧`). This command opens a command prompt for your selected interpreter.

Visual Studio Code Mac Python Permission Denied

A best practice among Python developers is to avoid installing packages into a global interpreter environment. You instead use a project-specific virtual environment that contains a copy of a global interpreter. Once you activate that environment, any packages you then install are isolated from other environments. Such isolation reduces many complications that can arise from conflicting package versions. To create a virtual environment and install the required packages, enter the following commands as appropriate for your operating system:

Note: For additional information about virtual environments, see Environments.

  1. Create and activate the virtual environment Note: When you create a new virtual environment, you should be prompted by VS Code to set it as the default for your workspace folder. If selected, the environment will automatically be activated when you open a new terminal.
  2. For macOS/Linuxpython3 -m venv .venv
  3. Run command in the folder source .venv/bin/activate
  4. Select your new environment by using the Python: Select Interpreter command from the Command Palette.
  5. Install the packages# python3 -m pip install matplotlib
  6. Rerun the program now (with or without the debugger) and after a few moments a plot window appears with the output:
  7. Once you are finished, type deactivate in the terminal window to deactivate the virtual environment.

Ref – https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/python/python-tutorial

In this Python Programming Tutorial, we will be learning how to set up a Python development environment in VSCode on MacOS. VSCode is a very nice free editor for writing Python applications and many developers are now switching over to this editor. In this video, we will learn how to install VSCode, get the Python extension installed, how to change Python interpreters, create virtual environments, format/lint our code, how to use Git within VSCode, how to debug our programs, how unit testing works, and more. We have a lot to cover, so let’s go ahead and get started…

VSCode on Windows – https://youtu.be/-nh9rCzPJ20

Visual Studio For Mac

Timestamps for topics in this tutorial:
Installation – 1:11
Python Extension – 6:21
Switching Interpreters – 10:16
Changing Color Themes – 13:08
VSCode Settings – 17:12
Set Default Python – 22:24
Using Virtual Environments – 25:52
IntelliSense – 30:28
Code Formatting – 33:08
Code Linting – 38:01
Code Runner Extension – 40:45
Git Integration – 49:05
Debugging – 58:15
Unit Testing – 1:02:38
Zen Mode – 1:10:42