Python equivalent of npm or rubygems?

Question:

I’ve been looking around for a package manager that can be used with python. I want to list project dependencies in a file.

For example ruby uses Gemfile where you can use bundle install.

How can I achieve this in Python?

Asked By: Dillon Benson

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Answers:

The pip tool is becoming the standard in equivalent of Ruby’s gems.

Like distribute, pip uses the PyPI package repository (by default) for resolving and downloading dependencies.

pip can install dependencies from a file listing project dependencies (called requirements.txt by convention):

pip install -r requirements.txt

You can "freeze" the current packages on the Python path using pip as well:

pip freeze > requirements.txt

When used in combination with the virtualenv package, you can reliably create project Python environments with a project’s required dependencies.

Answered By: Barry Wark

Python uses pip for a package manager. The pip install command has a -r <file> option to install packages from the specified requirements file.

Install command:

pip install -r requirements.txt

Example requirements.txt contents:

Foo >= 1.2
PickyThing <1.6,>1.9,!=1.9.6,<2.0a0,==2.4c1
SomethingWhoseVersionIDontCareAbout

See the Requirements Parsing section of the docs for a full description of the format: https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/user_guide/#requirements-files

Answered By: user2472759

Pipenv

(I know it’s an old question, and it already has an answer but for anyone coming here looking for a different answer like me.)

I’ve found a very good equivalent for npm, It’s called pipenv. It handles both virtualenv and pip requirements at the same time so it’s more like npm.


Simple Use Case

pip install pipenv

then you can make a new virtualenv with third version of python, as well as making a pipfile that will be filled with your projects requirement and other stuff:

pipenv install --three

using your created virtualenv:

pipenv shell

installing a new python package:

pipenv install requests

running your .py file is like:

pipenv run python somefile.py

you can find it’s doc here.

Answered By: Soorena

This is how I restrict pip‘s scope to the current project. It feels like the opposite if you’re coming from NodeJS’s npm or PHP’s composer where you explicitly specify global installations with -g or --global.

If you don’t already have virtualenv installed, then install it globally with:

 pip install virtualenv

Each Python project should have its own virtualenv installation. It’s easy to set one up, just cd to your project’s root and:

 python3 -m virtualenv env  # creates env folder with everything you need

Activate virtualenv:

 source env/bin/activate

Now, any interaction with pip is contained within your project.

Run pip install package_name==version for each of your dependencies. They are installed in ./env/lib/python3.x/site-packages/

When you want to save your project’s dependencies to a file, run:

 pip freeze > requirements.txt

You actually don’t need -l or --local if you’re in an activated project-specific virtualenv (which you should be).

Now, when you want to install your dependencies from requirements.txt, set up your virtualenv, and run:

 pip install -r requirements.txt

That’s all.

Answered By: Sam Malayek

This is an old question but things are constantly evolving.

Further to the other answer about pipenv. There is also a python package manger called poetry.

There is a detailed comparison between pipenv and poerty here: Feature comparison between npm, pip, pipenv and poetry package managers. It also links the features to common npm features.

Answered By: Resonance

Here is a comparison of pipenv vs poetry vs pdm: https://dev.to/frostming/a-review-pipenv-vs-poetry-vs-pdm-39b4
The conclusion is that pdm is the winner.

But in my experience, poetry is easier than pdm to integrate with IDEs.

Answered By: Wilson Tian
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