Spyder: Difference between revisions

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Spyder is an IDE for Python. I learned of it when working for Ceres Imaging.
Spyder is an IDE for Python. I learned of it when working for Ceres Imaging.
'''Go read the [[Anaconda]] page and set it up, then come back here.'''


https://github.com/spyder-ide/spyder
https://github.com/spyder-ide/spyder
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My initial interest in spyder was to debug code running on Windows using arcpy.
My initial interest in spyder was to debug code running on Windows using arcpy.
That means I have to use a 2.7 kernel.


Does that mean installing arcpy in a different place or getting spyder to use the Python that ESRI installs?
First, get everything going with [[Anaconda]]. That means getting arcpy to import from a python prompt.
There are some options for this in the [[Anaconda]] page. You can install a copy of python 2.7 and put a .pth file
 
into it that points at the ESRI arcpy code. This fools it into working.
Install spyder into the Anaconda environment.
 
To allow other Python installations to access Arcpy a file must be copied from the \Lib\site-packages\ folder within the Arc Python installation and placed in the corresponding folder of the non-Arc Python. If you have not installed 64-bit background geoprocessing the file is Desktop10.1.pth; if you have installed it, the file is DTBGGP64.pth.
 
I copied the pth files into the 32-bit and 64-bit envs/arc1051*/Lib/site-packages folders as well as the top level site-packages
 
It is likely NONE of this is needed with [[ArcGIS Pro]], just use the built in conda environment, and install spyder there.


On the Mac I edited the configuration settings to tell it which Python interpreter to use.
To work with MDB (Personal Geodatabase) files requires working in a 32-bit space so I install Miniconda 32-bit + Python 2.7
In the Mac I have to text edit ~/.spyder/spider.ini and change "Default" to "false" and "executable" to point at the right Python.
just for those special occasions when I still need to use MDB files.


== Remote debugging ==
== Remote debugging ==

Latest revision as of 17:57, 25 July 2018

Spyder is an IDE for Python. I learned of it when working for Ceres Imaging.

Go read the Anaconda page and set it up, then come back here.

https://github.com/spyder-ide/spyder

For me there are 4 critical features, which it has:

  • It includes a source level debugger.
  • It is cross-platform.
  • It has code completion.
  • Installing it does not require admin rights on Windows, so I have added it to my toolbox of portable Windows tools.

It's unusual in that it opens an IPython interpreter as its console window so you can just type in random python there. At Ceres we used it like a shell prompt to run code much like running commands.

ArcPy

My initial interest in spyder was to debug code running on Windows using arcpy.

First, get everything going with Anaconda. That means getting arcpy to import from a python prompt.

Install spyder into the Anaconda environment.

To allow other Python installations to access Arcpy a file must be copied from the \Lib\site-packages\ folder within the Arc Python installation and placed in the corresponding folder of the non-Arc Python. If you have not installed 64-bit background geoprocessing the file is Desktop10.1.pth; if you have installed it, the file is DTBGGP64.pth.

I copied the pth files into the 32-bit and 64-bit envs/arc1051*/Lib/site-packages folders as well as the top level site-packages

It is likely NONE of this is needed with ArcGIS Pro, just use the built in conda environment, and install spyder there.

To work with MDB (Personal Geodatabase) files requires working in a 32-bit space so I install Miniconda 32-bit + Python 2.7 just for those special occasions when I still need to use MDB files.

Remote debugging

This is something I can do in Komodo, but I have not needed it in some time, so I have not tried it in Spyder yet. Some notes: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/spyderlib/remote%7Csort:relevance/spyderlib/usljVmI50GI/BdjmwX1k4nAJ

I wonder if I could use a copy on my Mac to debug code running on a Parallels machine.

Mac install note

cd ~/bin
ln -s ../miniconda2/bin/conda
ln -s ../miniconda2/bin/spyder

Instead of trying to trick Spyder into using another Python, I just switched over to using Spyder for GIS and I install modules using "conda install modulename", e.g. "conda install gdal" will install the latest gdal.

You can use virtual environments, this will set one up called "gis" and install all the modules that arcgis and gdal depend upon.

conda create -n gis -c esri arcgis gdal

Now you have to tell spyder that you want it to use that virtualenv environment.