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PyCharm shows unresolved references error for valid code

I am using PyCharm to work on a project. The project is opened and configured with an interpreter, and can run successfully. The remote interpreter paths are mapped properly. This seems to be the correct configuration, but PyCharm is highlighting my valid code with "unresolved reference" errors, even for built-in Python functions. Why don't these seem to be detected, even though the code runs? Is there any way to get PyCharm to recognize these correctly?

This specific instance of the problem is with a remote interpreter, but the problem appears on local interpreters as well.

I have the same problem and sovled it. Here solution.

D
Dmitry Trofimov

File | Invalidate Caches... and restarting PyCharm helps.


This is the only way working on PyCharm 4.0.x in my case. The fact is if something got screwed up and it does not refresh (sometimes it even shows same interpreter repeated several times in the list) you'll have to delete the files manually... I've even had to remove .idea folders once.
This is so heavyweight. Is there no way to get the old "refresh path" option back in PyCharm 4.5?
It is really annoying that such a IDE doesn't take care of such a simple operation.
It works momentarily. After few minutes I get the same warning again
The accepted answer is heavyweight and very likely does not address the crux of the problem. Here is information straight from the horses mouth: JetBrains - PyCharm Content Root "PyCharm uses the source roots as the starting point for resolving imports" I had the issue exactly as in the title because in some projects I need to use a file tree where sources are in a subfolder, PyCharm is then confused about imports. Killing cache might help for a moment but is not the right approach. Mark the sources directory as root and all is good.
I
Ilian Iliev

Dmitry's response didn't work for me.

I got mine working by going to Project Interpreters, Selecting the "Paths" tab, and hitting the refresh button in that submenu. It auto-populated with something called "python-skeletons".

edit: screenshot using PyCharm 3.4.1 (it's quite well hidden)

https://i.stack.imgur.com/YjxLX.jpg


Where is "Python Interpreters". Do you mean "Project Interpreters"? I am using Linux and I couldn't find Paths tab either.
In PyCharm 3.4 on OSX, it's an icon which looks like a little folder tree, and doesn't say "Paths".
For anybody still confused (in PyCharm 3.4.1): Settings > Project Settings > Project Interpreter > Project Interpreters (gear button > more) > --Select the interpreter-- > Interpreter Paths (Directory Tree button on the right) > Reload List of Paths (Blue refresh-like button)
There is no such refresh button in PyCharm 4, only the plus and minus signs.
@Sarah In PyCharm 4.0.4, in the "Interpreter Paths" window, I don't have the "reload list of paths" button (bottom blue refresh icon). Also, I don't see any paths in the list and the plus and minus buttons are disabled.
f
florisla

There are many solutions to this, some more convenient than others, and they don't always work.

Here's all you can try, going from 'quick' to 'annoying':

Do File -> Invalidate Caches / Restart and restart PyCharm. You could also do this after any of the below methods, just to be sure.

You could also do this after any of the below methods, just to be sure.

First, check which interpreter you're running: Run -> Edit Configurations -> Configuration -> Python Interpreter.

Refresh the paths of your interpreter: File -> Settings Project: [name] -> Project Interpreter -> 'Project Interpreter': Gear icon -> More... Click the 'Show paths' button (bottom one) Click the 'Refresh' button (bottom one)

File -> Settings

Project: [name] -> Project Interpreter -> 'Project Interpreter': Gear icon -> More...

Click the 'Show paths' button (bottom one)

Click the 'Refresh' button (bottom one)

Remove the interpreter and add it again: File -> Settings Project: [name] -> Project Interpreter -> 'Project Interpreter': Gear icon -> More... Click the 'Remove' button Click the 'Add' button and re-add your interpeter

File -> Settings

Project: [name] -> Project Interpreter -> 'Project Interpreter': Gear icon -> More...

Click the 'Remove' button

Click the 'Add' button and re-add your interpeter

Delete your project preferences Delete your project's .idea folder Close and re-open PyCharm Open your project from scratch

Delete your project's .idea folder

Close and re-open PyCharm

Open your project from scratch

Delete your PyCharm user preferences (but back them up first). ~/.PyCharm50 on Mac %homepath%/.PyCharm50 on Windows

~/.PyCharm50 on Mac

%homepath%/.PyCharm50 on Windows

Switch to another interpreter, then back again to the one you want.

Create a new virtual environment, and switch to that environments' interpreter.

Create a new virtual environment in a new location -- outside of your project folder -- and switch to that environment's interpreter.

Switch to another interpreter altogether; don't switch back.

If you are using Docker, take note:

Make sure you are using pip3 not pip, especially with remote docker and docker-compose interpreters.

Avoid influencing PYTHONPATH. More info here: https://intellij-support.jetbrains.com/hc/en-us/community/posts/115000058690-Module-not-found-in-PyCharm-but-externally-in-Python .

If the above did not work for you, but you did find another trick, then please leave a comment.


I've been having this issue for as long as I've been using PyCharm and they still can't reliably fix it. Good thing that you've covered most of the work around that one way or another ends up fixing the problem. Funny how I come back to this answer from time to time to figure out what work around I forgot to try.
I worked my way down this list and removing/re-adding the interpreter worked for me. Thanks!
Two more tips: 1) If applicable make sure you are using pip3 not pip, especially with remote docker and docker-compose Interpreters. 2) If you are using docker-compose and/or docker playing around with PYTHONPATH can cause these types of issues. More info here: intellij-support.jetbrains.com/hc/en-us/community/posts/…
I tried everything above and for me creating a new virtual environment worked only when creating it at an entirely different location. I had a venv folder in my project but it kept showing as 'unresolved reference' (even though it executed properly). I created a new venv outside of my project folder and then it worked. No idea why.
moving the venv folder out of the project folder worked for me too.
S
Shoham

In my case it was the directories structure. My project looks like this:

+---dir_A
    +---dir_B
        +app
        |
        \-run.py

So right click on dir_b > "mark directory as" > "project root"


The question was not that PyCharm doesn't recognize project code. It doesn't recognize the standard Python built-in methods.
Solved my issue on PyCharm 2019.3.3 on MacOS
Apparently, this was my issue. Thanks!
Worked for me in version 2021.1, after trying all the other tips like reloading skeletons, etc.
d
dKen

You have to mark your root directory as: SOURCE ROOT (red), and your applications: EXCLUDED ROOT (blue).

Then the unresolved reference will disappear. If you use PyChram pro it do this for you automatically.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/iwtxJ.png


I have pycharm pro and it did not do this for me but after I manually marked the folders correctly it worked
Yes, that is the right answer and not some nuclear option where the side effect helps for a moment but does not address how the jetbrains tooling thinks ("kill the cache", right ... and when it gets rebuilt ? "kill it again!"). The title, which was exactly problem in of my projects, where the project root is not necessarily the sources root and imports fail to understand that. Here is information straight from the horses mouth jetbrains.com/help/pycharm/content-root.html "PyCharm uses the source roots as the starting point for resolving imports" !
Simply and easy fix. No other solution worked for me, but this! Thank you so much!
just marking the odoo dir as `source root' did the trick
This fixes the problem, but it introduces a new one: you can no longer scan for problems
T
Thomas Farvour

I find myself removing and re-adding the remote interpreter to fix this problem when Invalidating Caches or Refreshing Paths does not work.

I use vagrant and every once and awhile if I add a new VM to my multi-vm setup, the forwarded port changes and this seems to confuse PyCharm when it tries to use the wrong port for SSH. Changing the port doesn't seem to help the broken references.


I
Imran

If none of the other solutions work for you, try (backing up) and deleting your ~/.PyCharm40 folder, then reopening PyCharm. This will kill all your preferences as well.

On Mac you want to delete ~/Library/Caches/Pycharm40 and ~/Library/Preferences/PyCharm40.

And on Windows: C:\Users\$USER.PyCharm40.


This is the closest answer to what worked for me with Pycharm 2021.3.2. I deleted JetBrains directory from ~/Library/Caches/ and one or more files in ~/Library/Preferences as there were no JetBrains-related directories. In my case imports were unresolved with the docker-compose intertpreter. But everything worked with the Docker interpreter using the service started from exactly the same docker-compose file. Crazy.
s
siripan

Tested with PyCharm 4.0.6 (OSX 10.10.3) following this steps:

Click PyCharm menu. Select Project Interpreter. Select Gear icon. Select More button. Select Project Interpreter you are in. Select Directory Tree button. Select Reload list of paths.

Problem solved!


F
Fairlight Evony

Sorry to bump this question, however I have an important update to make.

You may also want to revert your project interpreter to to Python 2.7.6 if you're using any other version than that This worked for me on my Ubuntu installation of PyCharm 4.04 professional after none of the other recommendations solved my problem.


Switching to the local Python 2 interpreter and then back again to your remote Python 3 interpreter fixed this for me too.
This works on PyCharm 5 professional as well. None of the other solutions in this post have worked for me. I went into Settings -> "Project Interpreters", clicked the gear, and then "More...". Chose the default python interpreter (/usr/bin/python2.7 in my case), hit "Ok" and "Apply". Then went back in and chose the actual virtualenv I wanted to use. "Ok" and "Apply" again, and it's fixed.
Similarly FileNotFoundError is a Python-3-only thing. After I set the correct interpreter in both File-Settings-Project-Interpreter and Run-Edit-Configurations, one of those made the error go away.
f
flix

If you want to ignore only some "unresolved reference" errors, you can also tell it PyCharm explicitly by placing this in front of your class/method/function:

# noinspection PyUnresolvedReferences

G
General Grievance

Much simpler action:

File > Settings > Project > Project Interpreter

Select "No interpreter" in the "Project interpreter" list

Apply > Set your python interpreter again > Click Apply

Profit - Pycharm is updating skeletons and everything is fine.


Invalidating cache and restarting didn't work for me, but this did!
J
Jason McVetta

You might try closing Pycharm, deleting the .idea folder from your project, then starting Pycharm again and recreating the project. This worked for me whereas invalidating cache did not.


u
user2233949

I finally got this working after none of the proposed solutions worked for me. I was playing with a django rest framework project and was using a virtualenv I had setup with it. I was able to get Pycharm fixed by marking the root folder as the sources root, but then django's server would throw resolve exceptions. So one would work when the other wouldn't and vice versa.

Ultimately I just had to mark the subfolder as the sources root in pycharm. So my structure was like this

-playground
     -env
     -playground

That second playground folder is the one I had to mark as the sources root for everything to work as expected. That didn't present any issues for my scenario so it was a workable solution.

Just thought I'd share in case someone else can use it.


S
Shehaaz

https://i.stack.imgur.com/Z5bjt.png


k
kkica

None of the answers solved my problem.

What did it for me was switching environments and going back to the same environment. File->Settings->Project interpreter

I am using conda environments.


W
Waqar Detho

I closed all the other projects and run my required project in isolation in Pycharm. I created a separate virtualenv from pycharm and added all the required modules in it by using pip. I added this virtual environment in project's interpreter. This solved my problem.


T
Tim

Geeze what a nightmare, my amalgamation of different StackOVerflow answers:

Switch to local interpreter /usr/bin/pythonX.X and apply View paths like above answer Find skeletons path. Mine was (/home/tim/Desktop/pycharm-community-2016.2.3/helpers/python-skeletons) Switch back to virt interpreter and add the skeletons path manually if it didn't automatically show up.


A
Ali Sherafat

None of the above solutions worked for me!
If you are using virtual environment for your project make sure to apply the python.exe file that is inside your virtual environment directory as interpreter for the project (Alt + Ctrl + Shift + S) this solved the issue for me.


W
Wannes Goethals

In my case the inspection error shows up due to a very specific case of python code. A min function that contains two numpy functions and two list accesses makes my code inspection give this kind of errors.

Removing the 'd=0' line in the following example gives an unresolved reference error as expected, but readding doesn't make the error go away for the code inspector. I can still execute the code without problems afterwards.

import numpy as np
def strange(S, T, U, V):
    d = 0
    print min(np.abs(S[d]), np.abs(T[d]), U[d], V[d])

Clearing caches and reloading list of paths doesn't work. Only altering the code with one of the following example patches does work:

Another ordering of the 'min' parameters: schematically S U T V but not S T U V or T S U V

Using a method instead of the function: S[d].abs() instead of np.abs(S[d])

Using the built-in abs() function

Adding a number to a parameter of choice: U[d] + 0.


H
Hien Quang Le

My problem is that Flask-WTF is not resolved by PyCharm. I have tried to re-install and then install or Invalidate Cache and Restart PyCharm, but it's still not working.

Then I came up with this solution and it works perfectly for me.

Open Project Interpreter by Ctrl+Alt+S (Windows) and then click Install (+) a new packgage.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/myuCX.png

Type the package which is not resolved by PyCharm and then click Install Package. Then click OK.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/XD071.png

Now, you'll see your library has been resolved.


I
Ivica Čevis

In PyCharm 2020.1.4 (Community Edition) on Windows 10 10.0. Under Settings in PyCharm: File > Settings > Project Structure I made two changes in Project Structure: main folder marked as source and odoo folder with all applications I excluded Screenshot shows what I did. After that I restarted PyCharm: File > Invalidate Caches / Restart...

https://i.stack.imgur.com/KuXC9.png

https://i.stack.imgur.com/JePjc.png


O
Ouss

Invalidating the cache as suggested by other answers did not work for me. What I found to be the problem in my case was that PyCharm was marking init.py files of Python packages as text and thus not including them in the analysis which means python resolving was not working correctly.

The solution for me was to:

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

https://i.stack.imgur.com/386GQ.png


D
Daniil Mashkin

https://i.stack.imgur.com/EN9U2.png


q
qwr

I have a project where one file in src/ imports another file in the same directory. To get PyCharm to recognize I had to to go to File > Settings > Project > Project Structure > select src folder and click "Mark as: Sources"

From https://www.jetbrains.com/help/pycharm/configuring-folders-within-a-content-root.html

Source roots contain the actual source files and resources. PyCharm uses the source roots as the starting point for resolving imports


s
seizouki

I had to go to File->Invalidate Caches/Restart, reboot Ubuntu 18.04 LTS, then open Pycharm and File-> Invalidate Caches/Restart again before it cleared up.


V
Valli

For me it helped: update your main directory "mark Directory as" -> "source root"


A
Adrian

@kelorek works for me, but before, in interpereter paths I had to add some path. lets say

from geometry_msgs.msg import Twist

is underline as error, then in remote machine in python run:

help("geometry_msgs")

at the end there will be path lets say :

/opt/ros/foxy/lib/python3.8/site-packages/geometry_msgs/__init__.py

so to Your intepreter pycharm path add

/opt/ros/foxy/lib/python3.8/site-packages

Hope it will help You and it helps me :)


N
Nico Rösel

I had the same symptoms. In my instance the problem source was that I had set idea.max.intellisense.filesize=50 in the custom properties. I could resolve it by setting it to 100.

Help->Edit Custom Properties


B
Bar Horing Amir

Are you using virtualenv?

if so, you need to notify PyCharm for every change in the location of the the desired python.exe (merely ./activate is not enough for PyCharm)

Make sure Pycharm points to the correct interpetor and packages: File -> Settings -> Project -> Project Interpreter. Click the gear and choose python.exe under virtualenv's Scripts folder

https://i.stack.imgur.com/weN2m.png