I am confident that once the "+ Custom." button becomes active, the rest of the interpreter install will go fine.Īlternatively, If there is a lower-level way to add interpreters to the Python Environment, I would attempt that strategy if some guidance were provided.
I have restarted my computer and VS many times throughout troubleshooting. C drive Partition extend option greyed out for ssd in windows 10:Hi so my C drive was allocated only 70 GB when I got the laptop which got full almost immediately, I want to extend the same but. I would like to avoid this extreme repair strategy. The person had the same problem but only recovered use of the "+ custom" button by reinstalling his operating system and VS. Python 3.6, 3.5, 3.4.4 were installed but not automatically recognized. The only interpreter I have successfully added since is IronPython, which is automatically recognized. After restarting VS, Python is still not added, and the "+ Custom" button is greyed out, not allowing me to add the proper Python 3.5 or any other interpreter not automatically recognized. When I "Applied", the program stopped working. 3.6 wasn't an option in the edition dropdown, so tried to type it in. VS did not find Python 3.6 automatically, so I tried to add the path manually using "+ Custom.". Trying to add an interpreter to the Python Environment in MS Visual Studio 2015 (VS).ĭownloaded Python 3.6, at the time I did not realize 3.5 was recommended by MS for use with VS. I am a mechanical engineering student with a small amount of c programming experience, about to tackle a personal project using Python, which I will learn to use as-I-go.
First time posting! Really stuck, need experienced help.