PyCharm 2023.3 Help

Rename dialog for a method

Use this dialog to rename a method.

In addition to renaming the method itself, PyCharm can also look for the usages of the method name. If found, the changes you are making to the method name can also be applied to these usages.

The usages are assigned to different categories which correspond to the options which you can turn on and off.

Note that regardless of the options selected, the search scope (places where you search for the name occurrences) is always limited to the current entity (for example, a file, or a class) and the entities that the current one depends on.

Item

Description

Rename <method> and its usages to

Specify a new name for the method.

Search in comments and strings

If this checkbox is selected, PyCharm will look for occurrences of the method name within comments and string literals in your source code files.

Rename parameters in hierarchy

If this option is on, PyCharm will look for occurrences of the method name in the names of its inheritors. If you are renaming a class, PyCharm will search the hierarchies of the classes that extend this class.

Search in loaded sources

If this checkbox is selected, PyCharm will look for occurrences of the method name within downloaded object sources.

SQL Script

The statement to be run to rename the table or column. If necessary, you can edit the statement right in this pane.

Refactor

Execute the statement and make associated changes right away.

Preview

Preview potential associated changes prior to executing the statement.

Search for text occurrences

If this option is on, PyCharm will look for occurrences of the method name in the files that don't contain source code. These may be the text files, properties files, HTML files, documentation files, and so on.

Scope

Use this option to set a scope for the Rename refactoring. For example, you can limit the refactoring to only recently changed files, or to only open files, and so on. You can also create a custom scope that you can either share or keep local.

Last modified: 11 February 2024