I tried to change both the project name, which was energy-monitor
, and the package name (energymonitor
) to be the same and I set both to energy_monitor
, but nothing changes…but if I open the python shell in the same folder as the project I can import the energy_monitor
package with no errors, as soon as I change folder it doesn’t find the package anymore. It looks like it didn’t install the package system wide, but I thought that pipx should handle these kind of things.
Unfortunatly I’m not using any virtual environments, the packages are installed system-wide and I checked that the python version where the package is installed matched the one used by jupyter. Also, installing from jupyter didn’t work either :/
As many, I fit the description except for the age, but I hope this monoculture thing goes away. I don’t want an entire social network to be a huge bubble. If I want a bubble I join one of the many communities populated by people similar to me, but I want to have the chance to look “for something completely different”, getting in touch with world views completely opposte to mine.
Yeah well I don’t use flatpaks that much so I had no clue about it.
I found out the issue was in the launcher I installed. I tried to look at the Game Directory but the launcher wouldn’t open it. I then installed a launcher from another surce, which was the one recommended by the minecraft website (I know I should have used that from the beginning), and the game was correctly installed in the right directory. I was then able to see all my previous worlds correctly. For Arch linux users: the Flatpak version of the launcher didn’t work correctly, at least for me, the AUR package is the correct one.
I could but my home folder is pretty big, launching a search process throughout the home or the whole system would take ages so I would like to avoid it if possible…but I can try if there is no other solution.
I agree with AnuPpuccin + Style Settings beign an amazing combo, been using Catppuccin for a while before discovering that wonderful theme.
Yeah sorry I expressed myself wrongly, I mean that it looked like pipx didn’t install the package in the dedicated venv, and that was actually the case because I didn’t specify which packages to install in the pyproject.toml file apparently. I substituted these lines:
[tool.setuptools.packages.find] where = ["energymonitor"] [tool.setuptools.package-data] data = ["data/*"]
with these lines:
[tool.setuptools] packages = ["energymonitor"] include-package-data = true
and it worked!