11

So I have looked around at a lot of questions similar to mine, however I couldn't find a concrete answer. My comp specifications are Windows 7 64-bit.

My problem is as such:

1) I installed virtualenv using pip:

pip install virtualenv

2) After that I created and activated a new environment:

path/virtualenv env
...
path/to/env/Scripts/activate

3) While running the new environment, I installed django:

(env) path/pip install django

4) After installing successfully, I am ready to make a project. However, upon trying it out:

path/django-admin.py startproject test

I get the following error:

File "C:/path/env/Scripts/django-admin.py", line 2, in (module)
    from django.core import management
ImportError: No module named django.core

I have tried out various solutions people have posted, including using the full path:

python C:/path/to/django-admin.py startproject test

I have also checked to make sure the versions of Python it is referencing are correct,as both inside and outside the virtualenv it is associated with Python27. Many other solutions talked about PYTHONPATH or the syspath, however, when I import django or managemnet in the python shell, those work fine.

I have a feeling it may have something to do with the paths, but I'm not sure how a virtualenv interacts with the system paths. Since it is self-contained and the system paths are system wide, is it necessary to have something in the path specifically?

As an aside, my django-admin.py file is in both

path/env/Scripts

and

path/env/Lib/site-packages/django/bin

and the django folder is in

path/env/Lib/site-packages

How to fix this problem?

12 Answers 12

15

I solved this problem by using this command as following instead:

django-admin startproject

just remove the ".py" attached to "django-admin"

4

I could not get any other stack overflow answers to work either. Getting a venved Django stack running on Win64 is a bit of an ordeal.

But, I found an answer that worked for me here: http://samudranb.com/2012/06/02/how-to-setup-a-djangopython-development-env-on-windows/

Try running from an admin command prompt:

ftype Python.File="[your venv path]\Scripts\python.exe" "%1" %*

Just be sure to set it back to the original value when you're done.

0
2

This will help you understand why your facing that problem and there is also simple solution for that:

http://blog.jayteebee.org/2009/07/importerror-no-module-named-djangocore.html

2

I've literally searched for hours to a solution for this issue... I came across this video randomly: (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPmkl4jtYgA) where he put "python .\Script\django-admin.py startproject" into the command prompt while in a virtual environment, so I tried the same with the following modification to point to the correct path on my machine "python .\env\Script\django-admin.py startproject". Voila!

Hopefully this helps someone as it seems there are multiple reasons for this issue.

1

Windows server 2003 provides the Where command where python.exe

will show the full path of the current python.exe found on the path, use that to check it's using the correct one for your virtualenv.

The association issue comes into play because running file.py so the .py is argv[0] passes it through the windows association, which won't follow your venv.

python file.py will not find file.py unless it's in the current directory.

So the solution is -

python %VIRTUAL_ENV%\scripts\django-admin.py startproject myproject

This runs python from the current active venv and uses the venv env variable so it points to the correct location of django-admin.py (or you could give it an absolute path yourself of course)

0
1

I had the same problem. I solved that using this command: (env)C:\environment directory>python Scripts\django-admin.py

This link was helpful for me: enter link description here

1

i had the same problem i am running both python 3.4 and 2.7, so i pip installed Django globally on my machine and when i returned to my virtual environment i was able to create a project with no problems.

1

In Windows, you set:

set PATH=C:\virtualenv\python2.7\Scripts REM Scripts folder contains python.exe, pip.exe, django-admin.exe,...
set PYTHONPATH=C:\virtualenv\python2.7\Lib\site-packages REM site-packages folder contains packages of python such as django,...

After, create project mysite by

django-admin.py startproject mysite
0

I had this same problem using virtualenv in Terminal in MacOSX (Snow Leopard). My solution to the problem was to change the first line of django-admin.py from

#!/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/Resources/Python.app/Contents/MacOS/Python

to

#!/path-to-your-virtualenv-directory/bin/python

Hope this helps someone.

0

I had the same problem and the way I resolve it was by activating my project directory before making migrations and running my server "python manage.py runserver". Activate project Directory: source /path/bin/active Path meaning where your project is stored.

0

Had same error and This solved it out for me.

source /path/to/virtualwrapper/activate

pip install django

This fix tries to re-install and configure django
-1

I had the same problem, but I solved it, first I activated the virtual env, then ran:

django-admin.exe startproject project_name

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.