These suggestions, while more of a shotgun approach, tend to fix the majority of reported issues just on their own.
Restart Spyder, and try what you were doing before again.
Upgrade Spyder to the latest release, and you might find your issue is resolved (along with new features, enhancements, and other bug fixes). Minor releases come out every couple months, so unless you’ve updated recently, there is a good chance your version isn’t the latest. You can find out with the Check for updates command under the Help menu.
To perform the update with Conda (strongly recommended), from your terminal (or Anaconda Prompt on Windows) run:
conda update anaconda conda update spyder
Update Spyder’s dependencies and environment, either by installing the latest version of your distribution (e.g. the recommended Anaconda), or with the relevant “update all” command in your terminal (or Anaconda Prompt on Windows). To get the latest stable version of everything using Conda, you can run:
conda update qt pyqt spyder-kernels ipython ipykernel jupyter_client jupyter_core pyzmq
Restart your machine, in case the problem lies with a lingering process or another such issue.
Restore Spyder’s config files to their defaults, which solves a huge variety of Spyder issues. From your terminal (or Anaconda Prompt on Windows), run:
spyder --reset
Note
This will reset your preferences, as well as any custom keyboard shortcuts or syntax highlighting schemes. If you particularly care about any of those, you should make a copy of the .spyder-py3 folder in your user home directory (C:/Users/YOUR_USERNAME on Windows, /Users/YOUR_USERNAME on macOS, or /home/YOUR_USERNAME on Linux), and restore it afterwards if this doesn’t solve the problem.
.spyder-py3
C:/Users/YOUR_USERNAME
/Users/YOUR_USERNAME
/home/YOUR_USERNAME
Try installing Spyder into a new Conda environment (recommended) or virtualenv/venv, and see if the issue reoccurs.
virtualenv
venv
In your system terminal (or Anaconda Prompt on Windows), run the following commands to create an a fresh, clean environment and start Spyder in it:
conda create -n spyder-env spyder -y conda activate spyder-env spyder
If this fixes the issue, the problem was likely due to another package installed on your system, particularly if done with pip, which can cause many problems and should be avoided if at all possible.
Watch our video on solving and avoiding problems with pip, Conda and Conda-Forge, and follow its instructions.
If none of the previous steps solve your issue, you should do a full uninstall of Spyder by whatever means you originally installed it.
For Anaconda, follow all the steps under Option B in the Anaconda uninstall guide, delete the Anaconda directory wherever it was originally installed, and (on Windows) remove the %appdata%/python directory if it exists.
%appdata%/python
Then, do a clean install of the latest version of the Anaconda distribution which is how we recommend you install Spyder and keep it up to date.
Important
While you are welcome to get Spyder working on your own by one of the many other means we offer, we are only able to provide individual support for install-related issues for users of the Anaconda distribution. In particular, pip installation, while doable, is only really for experts, as there are many pitfalls involved and different issues specific to your setup, which is why we recommend using Conda whenever possible. For further information, please visit our Installation Guide.
If you get an error while running a specific line, block, or script/program, it may not be an issue with Spyder, but rather something lower down in the packages it depends on. Try running it in the following in order if and until it starts working as you expect. If you manage to isolate the bug, report it to the last one it doesn’t work in.
Spyder itself, of course! Make sure you can reproduce the error after closing and reopening it, if possible.
A bare QtConsole instance, e.g. launched from Anaconda navigator or from the Anaconda Prompt/Terminal/command line (Windows/Mac/Linux) with jupyter qtconsole.
jupyter qtconsole
QtConsole is the GUI console backend Spyder depends on to run its code, so most issues involving Spyder’s IPython Console are actually something with QtConsole instead, and can be reported to their issue tracker.
An IPython command line shell, launched with e.g. ipython from the Anaconda Prompt/Terminal/command line (Windows/Mac/Linux). Reproducible bugs can be reported to their Github page, though make sure to read their guidelines and docs first.
ipython
A standard Python interpreter, either run as a script file with python path/to/your/file.py or launched interactively with python from your Anaconda Prompt/Terminal/command line (Windows/Mac/Linux). While it is not impossible that you’ve found Python bug, it is much more likely to be an issue with the code itself or a package you are using, so your best sources are the Python docs and the other resources listed above.
python path/to/your/file.py
python
Tip
If the problem reoccurs in a similar or identical way with any of these methods (other than only Spyder itself), then it is almost certainly not an issue with Spyder, and would be best handled elsewhere. As we usually aren’t able to do much about issues not related to Spyder, a forum like Stack Overflow or the relevant package’s docs is a much better place to get help or report the issue.
See the Calling for Help section for other places to look for information and assistance.
If you know your way around Python, you can often diagnose and even fix Spyder issues yourself, since the IDE is written in the same language you use in it. You can explore the error messages you’re receiving and Spyder’s inner workings with the Internal Console, available under the menu item View ‣ Panes ‣ Internal Console.
For more detailed debug output, start Spyder from the command line (Anaconda Prompt on Windows) with spyder --debug-info verbose.
spyder --debug-info verbose
Even if you don’t manage to fix the problem yourself, this output can be very helpful in aiding us to quickly narrow down and solve your issue for you.