Qt utilities to enable hot-reloading of python/Qt code
Have you used Jupyter Notebook's magic functions such as
%load_ext autoreload
%autoreload 2
where you might have been editing code in VSCode or Pycharm and executing actions in Jupyter Notebook?
or perhaps you previously used LiClipse which has Debugger Auto-Reload?
Well, I used to love LiClipse and the hot-reload functionality, but I moved my day-to-day development to PyCharm due to it's superior plugin environment. Despite this, I always missed the hot-reload functionality, especially when developing Qt applications in Python.
Anyway, qtreload
is a small library that provides a similar hot-reload functionality when developing Qt code in Python.
It operates by first generating a list of all possible module/submodule files and then watching for any changes using the QFileWatcher
. Once a change is detected, the module
is reloaded and the changes are reflected in the application.
This library should be used when developing Qt code in Python and you are not interested in continually having to restart your application. Please see the limitations section to find out when it's still required.
You can install qtreload
using pip
:
pip install qtreload
You can instantiate the QtReloadWidget
manually or using the install_hot_reload
function.
Note! Make sure to instantiate QApplication before running this code.
Using QtReloadWidget
:
from qtreload import QtReloadWidget
# you can specify list of modules that should be monitored
list_of_modules = ["napari", "napari_plugin", "..."]
widget = QtReloadWidget(list_of_modules)
# add the widget to your application (or keep reference to it so it's not garbage collected)
app.layout().addWidget(widget)
That's pretty much it. Now every time you make changes to your source code in e.g. napari
will be reflected in your interpreter.
Using install_hot_reload
requires two environment variables being set, namely:
QTRELOAD_HOT_RELOAD=1
QTRELOAD_HOT_RELOAD_MODULES="napari,napari_plugin"
Then you can execute the following:
from qtreload.install import install_hot_reload
widget = install_hot_reload()
# add the widget to your application (or keep reference to it so it's not garbage collected)
app.layout().addWidget(widget)
There are countless examples where this approach really well. Some examples:
- You are running your application where you have method
on_run
but when you execute this function, you notice that you misspelled some variable. In normal circumstances you would need to restart the application. Now, however, you can correct it in your IDE, save, and try running again. - You are running your application and are modifying the layout of a popup window. Now you can do this and each time the dialog is reshown, the new version of the dialog will be shown.
- You are modifying a Qt style file (
*.qss
) and want to see the changes immediately (subscribe toevt_stylesheet
)
While this approach can be extremely useful and can save a lot of time, it has a couple of limitations:
- code within the
___init__.py
cannot be reloaded (most of the time) - some changes to GUI code cannot be hot-reloaded - if e.g., you are modifying the
QMainWindow
and just added a new button, this button will not be shown. In order to show it, you will still need to restart the application. If, however, you were modifying a plugin or a dialog that is shown upon clicking on e.g. menu item, these changes WILL take place. - modifying python properties (@setter/@getter) is not always reloaded (they will be reflected if you are adding a new property but not if you are changing existing property)
The hot-reload code is directly copied from the PyDev debugger developed by fabioz with minimal changes to remove any dependencies
See https://github.com/fabioz/PyDev.Debugger/blob/main/_pydevd_bundle/pydevd_reload.py