Pylance Missing Imports Poetry Link -
This happens because Poetry installs your project in ( -e ). Pylance needs help mapping your source code to the import path. Configure pyrightconfig.json (Pylance's engine) Create a pyrightconfig.json in your project root:
poetry config virtualenvs.in-project true Now, delete the old environment and create a new one: pylance missing imports poetry link
Warning: If you delete and recreate the Poetry environment (e.g., after updating dependencies), the hash abc123 changes, and this breaks. Use this only for personal, stable projects. If you are tired of fighting cached virtual env paths, you can force Poetry to create the .venv folder inside your project root. This is the most Pylance-friendly approach. This happens because Poetry installs your project in ( -e )
Note: The poetry.builder.enabled flag works with the official (by William T. N.). Method B: Hardcoded Absolute Path (Stable but Not Portable) Run poetry env info --path and paste the result directly into the config: Use this only for personal, stable projects
Use the for new projects. For existing projects, rely on .vscode/settings.json to explicitly declare the interpreter path. By taking control of how Pylance discovers your Poetry environment, you turn a daily annoyance into a seamless, productive workflow.
poetry env remove --all poetry install You will now see a .venv folder in your project root. VS Code will automatically detect this upon reopening the folder. Pylance will work immediately without any configuration. Sometimes Pylance knows where the libraries are (like requests or fastapi ), but it still complains about your own modules (e.g., from myapp.database import engine ).