PyCharm or Mercurial error: Number of lines annotated by Mercurial is not equal to number of lines in the...












2















When I click on Annotate, I often get this message in PyCharm 2018.2.5 (running on Ubuntu 18.04):




Number of lines annotated by Mercurial is not equal to number of lines
in the file. Check file econding and line separators




It looks like a Mercurial error, but in command line, the following command on the same file is succesful:



# hg annotate -ud <file>


Line enconding is LF, File encoding is UTF-8



EDIT



Mercurial version:



# hg --version
Mercurial Distributed SCM (version 4.5.3)


The file I'm try to annotate is in a subrepository, and checking the logs I discovered
PyCharm is trying to annotate using the father's repo.
If I execute the command in father's directory, I get an empty result.
So the error is misleading, and apparently I don't know how to set up PyCharm in this case.



Is there a way to fix this?










share|improve this question

























  • What Mercurial version do you have?

    – tukan
    Nov 26 '18 at 8:59











  • 4.5.3, I edited the question, thanks.

    – tonjo
    Nov 26 '18 at 12:18











  • Hmm that appears to be problem of PyCharm than Mercurial. Did you try this option? Ignore whitespace differences in annotations - jetbrains.com/help/pycharm/…

    – tukan
    Nov 26 '18 at 13:03











  • I did try that, but if you see my new edit, it's a different problem. Thanks anyway.

    – tonjo
    Nov 26 '18 at 13:11











  • I see. I'm no PyCharm expert, I'll gladly leave this for someone who is.

    – tukan
    Nov 26 '18 at 14:47
















2















When I click on Annotate, I often get this message in PyCharm 2018.2.5 (running on Ubuntu 18.04):




Number of lines annotated by Mercurial is not equal to number of lines
in the file. Check file econding and line separators




It looks like a Mercurial error, but in command line, the following command on the same file is succesful:



# hg annotate -ud <file>


Line enconding is LF, File encoding is UTF-8



EDIT



Mercurial version:



# hg --version
Mercurial Distributed SCM (version 4.5.3)


The file I'm try to annotate is in a subrepository, and checking the logs I discovered
PyCharm is trying to annotate using the father's repo.
If I execute the command in father's directory, I get an empty result.
So the error is misleading, and apparently I don't know how to set up PyCharm in this case.



Is there a way to fix this?










share|improve this question

























  • What Mercurial version do you have?

    – tukan
    Nov 26 '18 at 8:59











  • 4.5.3, I edited the question, thanks.

    – tonjo
    Nov 26 '18 at 12:18











  • Hmm that appears to be problem of PyCharm than Mercurial. Did you try this option? Ignore whitespace differences in annotations - jetbrains.com/help/pycharm/…

    – tukan
    Nov 26 '18 at 13:03











  • I did try that, but if you see my new edit, it's a different problem. Thanks anyway.

    – tonjo
    Nov 26 '18 at 13:11











  • I see. I'm no PyCharm expert, I'll gladly leave this for someone who is.

    – tukan
    Nov 26 '18 at 14:47














2












2








2








When I click on Annotate, I often get this message in PyCharm 2018.2.5 (running on Ubuntu 18.04):




Number of lines annotated by Mercurial is not equal to number of lines
in the file. Check file econding and line separators




It looks like a Mercurial error, but in command line, the following command on the same file is succesful:



# hg annotate -ud <file>


Line enconding is LF, File encoding is UTF-8



EDIT



Mercurial version:



# hg --version
Mercurial Distributed SCM (version 4.5.3)


The file I'm try to annotate is in a subrepository, and checking the logs I discovered
PyCharm is trying to annotate using the father's repo.
If I execute the command in father's directory, I get an empty result.
So the error is misleading, and apparently I don't know how to set up PyCharm in this case.



Is there a way to fix this?










share|improve this question
















When I click on Annotate, I often get this message in PyCharm 2018.2.5 (running on Ubuntu 18.04):




Number of lines annotated by Mercurial is not equal to number of lines
in the file. Check file econding and line separators




It looks like a Mercurial error, but in command line, the following command on the same file is succesful:



# hg annotate -ud <file>


Line enconding is LF, File encoding is UTF-8



EDIT



Mercurial version:



# hg --version
Mercurial Distributed SCM (version 4.5.3)


The file I'm try to annotate is in a subrepository, and checking the logs I discovered
PyCharm is trying to annotate using the father's repo.
If I execute the command in father's directory, I get an empty result.
So the error is misleading, and apparently I don't know how to set up PyCharm in this case.



Is there a way to fix this?







mercurial pycharm






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 26 '18 at 12:57







tonjo

















asked Nov 21 '18 at 14:29









tonjotonjo

8351019




8351019













  • What Mercurial version do you have?

    – tukan
    Nov 26 '18 at 8:59











  • 4.5.3, I edited the question, thanks.

    – tonjo
    Nov 26 '18 at 12:18











  • Hmm that appears to be problem of PyCharm than Mercurial. Did you try this option? Ignore whitespace differences in annotations - jetbrains.com/help/pycharm/…

    – tukan
    Nov 26 '18 at 13:03











  • I did try that, but if you see my new edit, it's a different problem. Thanks anyway.

    – tonjo
    Nov 26 '18 at 13:11











  • I see. I'm no PyCharm expert, I'll gladly leave this for someone who is.

    – tukan
    Nov 26 '18 at 14:47



















  • What Mercurial version do you have?

    – tukan
    Nov 26 '18 at 8:59











  • 4.5.3, I edited the question, thanks.

    – tonjo
    Nov 26 '18 at 12:18











  • Hmm that appears to be problem of PyCharm than Mercurial. Did you try this option? Ignore whitespace differences in annotations - jetbrains.com/help/pycharm/…

    – tukan
    Nov 26 '18 at 13:03











  • I did try that, but if you see my new edit, it's a different problem. Thanks anyway.

    – tonjo
    Nov 26 '18 at 13:11











  • I see. I'm no PyCharm expert, I'll gladly leave this for someone who is.

    – tukan
    Nov 26 '18 at 14:47

















What Mercurial version do you have?

– tukan
Nov 26 '18 at 8:59





What Mercurial version do you have?

– tukan
Nov 26 '18 at 8:59













4.5.3, I edited the question, thanks.

– tonjo
Nov 26 '18 at 12:18





4.5.3, I edited the question, thanks.

– tonjo
Nov 26 '18 at 12:18













Hmm that appears to be problem of PyCharm than Mercurial. Did you try this option? Ignore whitespace differences in annotations - jetbrains.com/help/pycharm/…

– tukan
Nov 26 '18 at 13:03





Hmm that appears to be problem of PyCharm than Mercurial. Did you try this option? Ignore whitespace differences in annotations - jetbrains.com/help/pycharm/…

– tukan
Nov 26 '18 at 13:03













I did try that, but if you see my new edit, it's a different problem. Thanks anyway.

– tonjo
Nov 26 '18 at 13:11





I did try that, but if you see my new edit, it's a different problem. Thanks anyway.

– tonjo
Nov 26 '18 at 13:11













I see. I'm no PyCharm expert, I'll gladly leave this for someone who is.

– tukan
Nov 26 '18 at 14:47





I see. I'm no PyCharm expert, I'll gladly leave this for someone who is.

– tukan
Nov 26 '18 at 14:47












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














I got it. I think it makes sense answering my own question.



The structure of my project is the following:




  • Project root (no VCS)


    • RepoDir (hg repository)


      • SubRepoDir (hg subrepository)






In this configuration something confuses PyCharm, and subrepositories at third level
won't be recognized.



The following works pretty well:




  • RepoDir as Project root (hg repository)


    • SubRepoDir (hg subrepository)




If other directories are needed, one can add them as content root.






share|improve this answer























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    1 Answer
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    active

    oldest

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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    0














    I got it. I think it makes sense answering my own question.



    The structure of my project is the following:




    • Project root (no VCS)


      • RepoDir (hg repository)


        • SubRepoDir (hg subrepository)






    In this configuration something confuses PyCharm, and subrepositories at third level
    won't be recognized.



    The following works pretty well:




    • RepoDir as Project root (hg repository)


      • SubRepoDir (hg subrepository)




    If other directories are needed, one can add them as content root.






    share|improve this answer




























      0














      I got it. I think it makes sense answering my own question.



      The structure of my project is the following:




      • Project root (no VCS)


        • RepoDir (hg repository)


          • SubRepoDir (hg subrepository)






      In this configuration something confuses PyCharm, and subrepositories at third level
      won't be recognized.



      The following works pretty well:




      • RepoDir as Project root (hg repository)


        • SubRepoDir (hg subrepository)




      If other directories are needed, one can add them as content root.






      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        I got it. I think it makes sense answering my own question.



        The structure of my project is the following:




        • Project root (no VCS)


          • RepoDir (hg repository)


            • SubRepoDir (hg subrepository)






        In this configuration something confuses PyCharm, and subrepositories at third level
        won't be recognized.



        The following works pretty well:




        • RepoDir as Project root (hg repository)


          • SubRepoDir (hg subrepository)




        If other directories are needed, one can add them as content root.






        share|improve this answer













        I got it. I think it makes sense answering my own question.



        The structure of my project is the following:




        • Project root (no VCS)


          • RepoDir (hg repository)


            • SubRepoDir (hg subrepository)






        In this configuration something confuses PyCharm, and subrepositories at third level
        won't be recognized.



        The following works pretty well:




        • RepoDir as Project root (hg repository)


          • SubRepoDir (hg subrepository)




        If other directories are needed, one can add them as content root.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 27 '18 at 9:13









        tonjotonjo

        8351019




        8351019
































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