Coming soon…
A good quick way of checking if VisPy is properly installed is to print out system information. This output includes information like what backends you have installed as well as information that can be gathered from OpenGL about your GPU. This can be very important information to provide to VisPy maintainers when filing bugs or asking questions. To get this information, you can run the following python code:
import vispy print(vispy.sys_info())
Note
This can be done in a one-liner from the command line with:
python -c "import vispy; print(vispy.sys_info())"
The output of this should look something like the below, but will ultimately depend on your environment and your machine.
Platform: Linux-5.4.0-7642-generic-x86_64-with-debian-bullseye-sid Python: 3.7.6 | packaged by conda-forge | (default, Mar 23 2020, 23:03:20) [GCC 7.3.0] NumPy: 1.18.1 Backend: PyQt5 pyqt4: None pyqt5: ('PyQt5', '5.12.3', '5.12.5') pyside: None pyside2: None pyglet: None glfw: None sdl2: None wx: None egl: EGL 1.5 NVIDIA: OpenGL_ES OpenGL osmesa: None _test: None GL version: '4.6.0 NVIDIA 455.28' MAX_TEXTURE_SIZE: 32768 Extensions: 'GL_AMD_multi_draw_indirect ...'
One important thing to look for is the “GL version”. If you see an empty string here or got an error when running this command, this likely means your system’s OpenGL library is not properly installed or can’t be found by VisPy. You may need to upgrade or re-install your GPU drivers to fix this or OpenGL may not be compatible with your system.
There are two things that are common across all of the VisPy interfaces in one way or another:
One Application instance
Application
At least one Canvas (or subclass) instance
Canvas
The VisPy Application object wraps the high-level event loop logic of the VisPy backend you use (PyQt5, Wx, etc). In most cases you don’t have to know too much about this, but you do need to create and run the application which we’ll see below. If the application is not started, VisPy will not be able to process events and won’t run properly. Note that just like with any GUI framework, calling the .run() method of the application is a blocking call. Nothing after the .run() call will be executed until the application is stopped, usually by closing your GUI window.
.run()
The Canvas object will be your main way of using and controlling VisPy. Depending on the VisPy interface you’re using, you’ll either be using the Canvas, SceneCanvas, or creating Figure objects. While these different types of canvases are built on each other, they will almost never be used in the same application. To help keep your code easy to understand it is best not to mix these classes or their subcomponents.
SceneCanvas
Figure