How to configure Python Kivy for PyCharm on Windows?
This Kivy's Wiki page Setting Up Kivy with various popular IDE's has a better answer and detail commands. It is copied below with added information for Pycharm 3.4.
Go to your unzipped Kivy folder, create a symbol link for "kivy.bat" pointing to "python.bat" in the same directory (mklink python.bat kivy.bat).
Add 2 new Python interpreters in PyCharm.
- Bootstrapper: Choose the earlier created "python.bat" from the Kivy package folder.
- Project Interpreter: Choose the "python.exe" from the Python subdirectory in the Kivy package folder.
For the project interpreter, add a path to the "kivy" directory directly contained in the Kivy package folder. In PyCharm 3.4, the path tab is hidden in a sub menu. In Project Interpreter, click the tool icon next to the interpreter dropdown list, click more... (the last one), in the list of all project interpreters, select Run-Configuration Interpreter, on the right side there are five icons (+, -, edit, virtual env, and path), click path to add the Kivy sub-directory in unzipped Kivy folder.
Save all settings and ignore warnings about "Invalid output format". Make sure that the project interpreter is set to our earlier created configuration.
Create a new run configuration and set the Python interpreter to our earlier created bootstrapper.
Simply run the configuration to execute your Kivy application
Install and open PyCharm
- If you already had it installed and have a project open, click
File -> Settings (Ctrl + Alt + S)
. (If not, create a new project, and click the '...
' (or ) next to interpreter, and skip step 2) - Under Project Settings, click
Project Interpreter -> Python Interpreters
- Click the little green + and select local (You can also set up an interpreter to your installed python from this list)
- Point it to
..\Kivy\Python\python.exe
and click ok (my path wasc:\Program files (x86)\Kivy\Python\python.exe
since that is where I unzipped the kivy zip file to)
I have also attached a settings.jar file. This is the kv
language definition. It is not complete, but it helps a lot.
Click File->Import
and select the settings.jar
file.
Only FileTypes will be ticked. Import this and you will have "kv language file
" definition under File->Settings-IDE Settings->File Types
Open a kv
file to see the differentiation in colours, as well as autocomplete
- Widgets are type 1
- Properties are type 2
- all events (on_something) are type 3
- type 4 is just self and root.
That is all for PyCharm, the rest is Windows 7 specific
- open a command prompt and browse to your
..\Kivy\Python\lib
folder - type
mklink /D kivy "..\Kivy\kivy\kivy"
(my line wasmklink /D kivy "c:\Program files (x86)\Kivy\kivy\kivy"
) This will set up a symlink so that your all your kivy python files are read and their definitions are included, in order to get autocomplete
Now we need to set up the environment variables. You could do this per project inside PyCharm, but might as well do it in windows, so you only need to select the python interpreter each time.
Click start and type envir Select the second one. (System variables) (You could also get here with Win+PauseBreak
-> Click Advanced system settings
)
Click Environment variables
Now add these (once again, just point to wherever you have your kivy
folder. You can also find all these in the kivy.bat
file, just find and replace the variables with your path)
GST_PLUGIN_PATH
c:\Program Files (x86)\Kivy\gstreamer\lib\gstreamer-0.10
GST_REGISTRY
c:\Program Files (x86)\Kivy\gstreamer\registry.bin
PATH
c:\Program Files (x86)\Kivy;c:\Program Files (x86)\Kivy\Python;c:\Program Files (x86)\Kivy\gstreamer\bin;c:\Program Files (x86)\Kivy\MinGW\bin;c:\Program Files (x86)\Kivy\kivy;%PATH
Restart your machine. (For the environment variables to load)
Now when you open your kivy project, just select the Kivy interpreter you set up earlier, and bobs your uncle.