Starting Backwards
- firebase-admin is the official name for the PyPi package for Firebase in Python.
- The firebase_admin package however, is what Google and Firebase have named the folder internally, and is why you install the package as follows:
pip install firebase-admin
But once the package is on your machine, you import the individual modules from firebase_admin
in your code as follows:
from firebase_admin import firestore, initialize_app, <otherModule etc...>
As far as I've seen, there is no firebase_admin
package on PyPi- There may however be an alias to firebase-admin that I am unaware of, but do not take my word on this.
As for the installation issues
One reason you may be encountering issues when using Pycharm is that Jetbrains /Pycharm may be creating a Virtual Environment for you without you knowing.
By running pip install firebase-admin
in newly opened terminal, you install the package in your global python package index. If Pycharm is starting the Virtual Environment they've set up when you open the IDE, it likely won't have any knowledge of your global packages.
A good practice is to create your own Virtual Environment and activating it when you start working on the project.
You can create the officially supported venv environment by running,
python3 -m venv ./path/to/your/project/venv
Alternatively you can navigate to the root of your project and run python3 -m venv venv/
.
Now you should be able to activate it by running,
source venv/bin/activate
If you created the venv in Mac/Linux environment or,
.\venv\Scripts\activate
In Windows.
See the official docs Here.
Lastly, if you are uploading this project to a VCS repository like GitHub, don't forget to add venv/
to your .gitignore
as the folder can be quite large.