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I want to set up a complete Python IDE in Sublime Text 2.

I want to know how to run the Python code from within the editor. Is it done using build system? How do I do it ?

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15 Answers 15

380

Tools -> Build System -> (choose) Python then:

To Run:

      Tools -> Build

      -or-

      Ctrl + B

      CMD + B  (OSX)

This would start your file in the console which should be at the bottom of the editor.

To Stop:

       Ctrl + Break or Tools -> Cancel Build

       Fn + C (OSX)

You can find out where your Break key is here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Break_key.

Note: CTRL + C will NOT work.

What to do when Ctrl + Break does not work:

Go to:

Preferences -> Key Bindings - User

and paste the line below:

{"keys": ["ctrl+shift+c"], "command": "exec", "args": {"kill": true} } 

Now, you can use ctrl+shift+c instead of CTRL+BREAK

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  • 9
    sublime text can also "auto detect" the language. So it worked for me to just CTRL + B
    – Alexis
    Commented Mar 3, 2012 at 4:31
  • 4
    Make sure python is in your PATH... the windows installer doesn't seem to do this automagically
    – SeanJA
    Commented May 15, 2012 at 23:07
  • 3
    My keyboard's break key looks like "Pause/Break", so to stop process I also added {"keys": ["pause"], "command": "exec", "args": {"kill": true} }
    – icy
    Commented Aug 15, 2013 at 16:14
  • 3
    Having the line {"keys": ["ctrl+shift+c"], "command": "exec", "args": {"kill": true} } in User key bindings and using ctrl+shift+c prints that the build is [Cancelled] while the program still being run.
    – Devi
    Commented Dec 18, 2013 at 10:14
  • In IDLE you can continue to use the shell your code runs in (to inspect objects, try more code, etc.). How do we do this in Sublime?
    – pqn
    Commented Mar 16, 2014 at 2:52
56

Edit %APPDATA%\Sublime Text 2\Python\Python.sublime-build

Change content to:

{
    "cmd": ["C:\\python27\\python.exe", "-u", "$file"],
    "file_regex": "^[ ]*File \"(...*?)\", line ([0-9]*)",
    "selector": "source.python"
}

change the "c:\python27" part to any version of python you have in your system.

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  • 3
    Pay attention to the double slash in the path, Sublime won't recognize it otherwise!
    – Enrico
    Commented Jun 30, 2012 at 4:46
  • 6
    Single forward slash also works in place of double backslash on Windows: "C:/Python27/python.exe" (à la Linux and OSX)
    – Dylan Hogg
    Commented Jul 2, 2012 at 5:00
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    For me the path was %APPDATA%\Sublime Text 2\Packages\Python\Python.sublime-build
    – aultimus
    Commented Aug 28, 2013 at 15:35
  • 5
    I don't seem to see the Python folder in Sublime Text 3
    – HoKy22
    Commented Jun 22, 2015 at 14:22
56

On Mac OS X, save your file with a .py extension. Press + B. It runs in a window below.

enter image description here

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44

To RUN press CtrlB (answer by matiit)

But when CtrlB does not work, Sublime Text probably can't find the Python Interpreter. When trying to run your program, see the log and find the reference to Python in path.

[cmd:  [u'python', u'-u', u'C:\\scripts\\test.py']]
[path: ...;C:\Python27 32bit;...]

The point is that it tries to run python via command line, the cmd looks like:

python -u C:\scripts\test.py

If you can't run python from cmd, Sublime Text can't too.
(Try it yourself in cmd, type python in it and run it, python commandline should appear)

SOLUTION

You can either change the Sublime Text build formula or the System %PATH%.

  • To set your %PATH%:
    *You will need to restart your editor to load new %PATH%

    • Run Command Line* and enter this command: *needs to be run as administrator
      SETX /M PATH "%PATH%;<python_folder>"
      for example: SETX /M PATH "%PATH%;C:\Python27;C:\Python27\Scripts"

    • OR manually: (preferable)
      Add ;C:\Python27;C:\Python27\Scripts at the end of the string. Setting Path in Win7

  • To set the interpreter's path without messing with System %PATH% see this answer by ppy.

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6

If using python 3.x you need to edit the Python3.sublime-build

(Preferences > Browse packages > Python 3)

to look like this:

{
  "path": "/usr/local/bin",
  "cmd": ["python3", "-u", "$file"],
  "file_regex": "^[ ]*File \"(...*?)\", line ([0-9]*)",
  "selector": "source.python"
}
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5

[ This applies to ST3 (Win), not sure about ST2 ]

To have the output visible in Sublime as another file (+ one for errors), do this:

  1. Create a new build system: Tools > Build Systems > New Build System...
  2. Use the following configuration:

    {
        "cmd": ["python.exe", "$file", "1>", "$file_name.__STDOUT__.txt", "2>", "$file_name.__STDERR__.txt"],
        "selector": "source.python",
        "shell": true,
        "working_dir": "$file_dir"
    }
  1. For your Python file select the above build system configuration file: Tools > Build Systems > {your_new_build_system_filename}
  2. ctrl + b
  3. Now, next to your file, e.g. "file.py" you'll have "file.__STDOUT__.py" and "file.__STDERR__.py" (for errors, if any)
  4. If you split your window into 3 columns, or a grid, you'll see the result immediately, without a need to switch panels / windows
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In python v3.x you should go to : Tools->Build System->New Build System.

Then, it pop up the untitled.sublime-build window in sublime text editor.Enter setting as:

{

    "cmd": ["path_to_the_python.exe","-u", "$file"],
    "file_regex": "^[ ]*File \"(...*?)\", line ([0-9]*)",
    "selector": "source.python"
}

To see the path, Type following in terminal as:

python
>>> import sys
>>>print(sys.executable)

You can make more than one Build System but it should default save inside Packages of Sublime text with .sublime-build extension.

Then, select the new Build System and press cltr+b or other based on your os.

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Cool U guys, I just found this:

http://ptomato.wordpress.com/2012/02/09/geek-tip-running-python-guis-in-sublime-text-2/

It explains (like one of the answers above) how to edit this exec.py in the default directory.

I had the problem that my PYTHON UI APPLICATION would not start. I commented out the last line from the following snipped:

    # Hide the console window on Windows
    startupinfo = None
    if os.name == "nt":
        startupinfo = subprocess.STARTUPINFO()
        #startupinfo.dwFlags |= subprocess.STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW

and, taaadaaaa, I could start my app by pressing Ctrl+B. Funny line anyways, uh? And a big thank you to whoever wrote that article ;-)

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1

I solved this problem :

> Preferences –> Browse Packages –> Default 

Open the exec.py file, near line 41-42, the code should look like this :

for k, v in proc_env.iteritems():
    proc_env[k] = os.path.expandvars(v).encode(sys.getfilesystemencoding())

then delete it or edit it as :

try:    
    for k, v in proc_env.iteritems():
        proc_env[k] = os.path.expandvars(v).encode(sys.getfilesystemencoding())
except:
    print 'foobar'
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  • what does it do actually? How does it help?
    – Qwerty
    Commented Jun 14, 2013 at 9:44
  • @Qwerty He thought the program should handle exceptions so he put the code in a try block.
    – CHM
    Commented Oct 11, 2013 at 2:58
  • I tried this. It didn't fix the problem, and it broke the existing behavior. Commented Aug 15, 2014 at 0:57
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I ran into the same problem today. And here is how I managed to run python code in Sublime Text 3:

  1. Press Ctrl + B (for Mac, + B) to start build system. It should execute the file now.
  2. Follow this answer to understand how to customise build system.

What you need to do next is replace the content in Python.sublime-build to

{
    "cmd": ["/usr/local/bin/python", "-u", "$file"],
    "file_regex": "^[ ]*File \"(...*?)\", line ([0-9]*)",
    "selector": "source.python",
}

You can of course further customise it to something that works for you.

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seems the Ctrl+Break doesn't work on me, neither the Preference - User...

use keys, Alt → t → c

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You can access the Python console via “View/Show console” or Ctrl+`.

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    but it shows the following error : File ".\exec.py", line 109, in run File ".\ntpath.py", line 205, in dirname File ".\ntpath.py", line 170, in split File ".\ntpath.py", line 125, in splitdrive TypeError: 'NoneType' object is unsubscriptable
    – neo
    Commented Dec 19, 2011 at 2:05
  • Please give more details (by expanding the question) on what you are doing.
    – poke
    Commented Dec 19, 2011 at 8:25
  • i just type in python code like print 'hello' and then build it and open the console to see this error.
    – neo
    Commented Dec 20, 2011 at 9:23
  • Using the Python console does not answer the question. The embedded interpreter is intended only to interact with the plugin API, not for general development.
    – mkenyon
    Commented Apr 22, 2013 at 7:11
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I had the same problem. You probably haven't saved the file yet. Make sure to save your code with .py extension and it should work.

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One thing to note about the aforementioned build system: you can write (and use) custom .sublime-build files or even per project build_systems clause (in your project settings). This allows you to do useful things like a fancy test runner with ANSI colors output.

For even more "full IDE" features, you can use the excellent SublimePythonIDE package:

  • code completion (intel)
  • jump to definition & object description
  • proper linting/pep8
  • supports different interpreters with virtualenv

Disclosure: I've contributed a PR to that package, and I use it all the time, but there are others.

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Use a real python console alongside Sublime

Both Sublime's build system and SublimeREPL (the answers above) are limited in that you can't easily interact with the workspace variables after you run your file.

If you want to run a script, then work in a REPL-like fashion (like you would in an IDE), then I recommend having Sublime open alongside an IPython console. Using AutoHotKey (Windows) or AutoKey (Linux), you can set this up such that a single shortcut will copy the filename (or just the selected code) and then paste this in the console to run the file.

Detailed instructions for Linux or Windows

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