

The solution to the problem is to comment out the path: #export PATH="/home/"user"/"anaconda version"/bin:$PATH" bashrc will cause errors when you try to use ROS. (press ctrl + h in home directory to view file)Įxample: # added by Anaconda x.x.x installerĮxport PATH="/home/"user"/"anaconda version"/bin:$PATH" When Anaconda installs, it will create a path in your.
#VISUAL STUDIO FOR MAC RUN PYTHON INSTALL#
For convenience, you can also launch it by default like this by changing the Exec= line in your sktop launcher (which you need to create manually if you install Eclipse from the Eclipse website directly). This will make bash source ~/.bashrc, in which ROS has to be sourced and parameterized, and start that IDE.

E.g., replace its command eclipse with bash -i -c "eclipse".

Likewise, you can enhance your IDE's launcher icon to load your shells environment. Differently, CLion has a plugin allowing to automatically setup it, avoid the trouble to run CLion from a ROS-sourced shell. All IDEs might have a config for that and, for most IDEs, the easiest way is to run it from a ROS-sources shell. On ROS Answers there is a thread about Which IDE(s) do ROS developers use? that might have further hints not yet entered here.įor building and running ROS programs from inside IDEs, the ROS enviroment has to be set up. Getting ROS environment variables in NetBeans.Running and debugging your executables within Eclipse.
