nvim/plugin-confs/nvim-dap-python.lua

52 lines
2.2 KiB
Lua

local dp = require('dap-python')
dp.test_runner = 'pytest'
-- local dap = require('dap')
-- dap.adapters.python = function(cb, config)
-- if config.request == 'attach' then
-- ---@diagnostic disable-next-line: undefined-field
-- local port = (config.connect or config).port
-- ---@diagnostic disable-next-line: undefined-field
-- local host = (config.connect or config).host or '127.0.0.1'
-- cb({
-- type = 'server',
-- port = assert(port,
-- '`connect.port` is required for a python `attach` configuration'),
-- host = host,
-- options = { source_filetype = 'python' }
-- })
-- else
-- cb({
-- type = 'executable',
-- command = '/home/sudacode/Projects/Python/debugpy/env/bin/python',
-- args = { '-m', 'debugpy.adapter' },
-- options = { source_filetype = 'python' }
-- })
-- end
-- end
-- dap.configurations.python = {
-- {
-- -- The first three options are required by nvim-dap
-- type = 'python', -- the type here established the link to the adapter definition: `dap.adapters.python`
-- request = 'launch',
-- name = "Launch file",
-- -- Options below are for debugpy, see https://github.com/microsoft/debugpy/wiki/Debug-configuration-settings for supported options
-- program = "${file}", -- This configuration will launch the current file if used.
-- pythonPath = function()
-- -- debugpy supports launching an application with a different interpreter then the one used to launch debugpy itself.
-- -- The code below looks for a `venv` or `.venv` folder in the current directly and uses the python within.
-- -- You could adapt this - to for example use the `VIRTUAL_ENV` environment variable.
-- local cwd = vim.fn.getcwd()
-- if vim.fn.executable(cwd .. '/env/bin/python') == 1 then
-- return cwd .. '/env/bin/python'
-- elseif vim.fn.executable(cwd .. '/.env/bin/python') == 1 then
-- return cwd .. '/.env/bin/python'
-- else
-- return '/usr/bin/python'
-- end
-- end
-- }
-- }