319

I have the following line in my header:

import config.logging_settings

This actually changes my Python logging settings, but Pylint thinks it is an unused import. I do not want to remove unused-import warnings in general, so is it possible to just ignore this one specific line?

I wouldn't mind having a .pylintrc for this project, so answers changing a configuration file will be accepted.

Otherwise, something like this will also be appreciated:

import config.logging_settings # pylint: disable-this-line-in-some-way

5 Answers 5

481

Pylint message control is documented in the Pylint manual:

Is it possible to locally disable a particular message?

Yes, this feature has been added in Pylint 0.11. This may be done by adding # pylint: disable=some-message,another-one at the desired block level or at the end of the desired line of code.

You can use the message code or the symbolic names.

For example,

def test():
    # Disable all the no-member violations in this function
    # pylint: disable=no-member
    ...
    # pylint: enable=no-member

apply to a specific line only:

global VAR  # pylint: disable=global-statement

or for less verbosity, disable the ONLY following line (pylint 2.10+):

# pylint: disable-next=global-statement
global VAR

Pylint's manual also has further examples.

There is a wiki that documents all Pylint messages and their codes.

4
  • 26
    I like flake8s # noqa. I dont want to see so many comments in the code. # nolint would be even clearer. Jun 3, 2020 at 23:14
  • 8
    @NilsLindemann the downside of that is that you lose information about what messages you were avoiding. You might accidentally suppress a message you didn't mean to (perhaps due to future version changes or something). Apr 23, 2021 at 23:04
  • 4
    @PierceDarragh if this precision is needed one can append one or more error codes, or classes of error codes. For example, in def foo() :return 1 is 1, appending # noqa: E203 will not report the whitespace before the :. Appending # noqa: E2 will not report any whitespace related issues. But the use of is instead of == will still be reported. See flake8s and pycodestyles error codes. More Infos. Apr 24, 2021 at 17:44
  • Pylance, btw, has # type: ignore. Oct 28, 2023 at 17:44
115
import config.logging_settings # pylint: disable=W0611

That was simple and is specific for that line.

You can and should use the more readable form:

import config.logging_settings # pylint: disable=unused-import
3
  • 4
    Where do you get the message explicit symbol from? My linter (the one in spyder) doesn't report it and the wiki linked in jomo's answer doesn't list it either.
    – Joooeey
    May 15, 2018 at 17:43
  • You mean unused-import? I think my linter gave me a warning when I used W0611, but its been >3yrs so I do not remember :/ Sorry May 15, 2018 at 19:26
  • 3
    This Pylint help page lists all the Pylint errors (and warnings, etc.) in both coded and named format. Just do a "find in page" and search for either the code or name. Apr 3, 2022 at 23:36
14

In addition to the accepted answer:

You can re-enable the error checking adding pylint: enable:SPECIFIC_ERROR

For example, I have this in my code:

import time
import datetime
import os
import sys
# pylint: disable=import-error
import serial
# pylint: enable=import-error

This way you can ignore a single error on a single line without having to disable checking that error in the whole file

4
  • Do you know if there is a way to just disable for a particular line without having to re-enable it again? Jan 21, 2022 at 15:40
  • 2
    This was the simplest way I found. You can completly disable errors globally in the .pylintrc file
    – Alejo Dev
    Jan 22, 2022 at 16:21
  • 9
    Put the pylint comment at the end of the line that you want to disable instead of a line of its own. Then it takes effect only for that line. Apr 3, 2022 at 23:28
  • 6
    From pylint 2.10 one can use pylint: disable-next=... option (see the accepted answer) which has an effect on the very NEXT line only. Sep 8, 2022 at 19:47
5

Checkout the files in https://github.com/PyCQA/pylint/tree/master/pylint/checkers. I haven't found a better way to obtain the error name from a message than either Ctrl + F-ing those files or using the GitHub search feature:

If the message is "No name ... in module ...", use the search:

No name %r in module %r repo:PyCQA/pylint/tree/master path:/pylint/checkers

Or, to get fewer results:

"No name %r in module %r" repo:PyCQA/pylint/tree/master path:/pylint/checkers

GitHub will show you:

"E0611": (
    "No name %r in module %r",
    "no-name-in-module",
    "Used when a name cannot be found in a module.",

You can then do:

from collections import Sequence # pylint: disable=no-name-in-module
2
  • 2
    you can find them all in the docs
    – Esteban
    Jan 21, 2019 at 8:19
  • Thanks, it's much better than going through the source. I found two more mirrors for the pylint doc. Apparently, readthedoc is the official mirror. The other one is pylint.org
    – loxaxs
    Jan 21, 2019 at 22:54
4

I believe you're looking for...

import config.logging_settings  # @UnusedImport

Note the double space before the comment to avoid hitting other formatting warnings.

Also, depending on your IDE (if you're using one), there's probably an option to add the correct ignore rule (e.g., in Eclipse, pressing Ctrl + 1, while the cursor is over the warning, will auto-suggest @UnusedImport).

3
  • 3
    This might work for some IDEs, but did not work for emacs/flycheck. Thanks. Please keep the answer since it might help someone else. Mar 3, 2015 at 10:24
  • 3
    This doesn't work when running pylint or flake8 from the command line. Aug 19, 2016 at 10:02
  • @JacobTomlinson Interesting, thanks. It's what Pydev accepts and I was under the impression that pyclipse simply shelled out to pylint. Must either be slightly customised or maybe eclipse is processing those directives and suppressing the output.
    – Basic
    Aug 19, 2016 at 15:13

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