I've developed a little script that searches through a wallpaper database online and download the wallpapers, I want to give this script to another person that isn't exactly good with computers and I'm kinda starting with python so I don't know how to include the "imports" of the third party modules in my program so it can be 100% portable, Is there something that can help me do this? or I will have to enter and analyse my third party modules and copy&paste the functions that I use?
2 Answers
Worse thing to do
An easy thing you can do is simply bundle the other modules in with your code. That does not mean that you should copy/paste the functions from the other modules into your code--you should definitely not do that, since you don't know what dependencies you'll be missing. Your directory structure might look like:
/myproject
mycode.py
thirdpartymodule1.py
thirdpartymodule2.py
thirdpartymodule3/
<contents>
Better thing to do
The real best way to do this is include a list of dependencies (usually called requirements.txt
) in your Python package that Python's package installer, pip
, could use to automatically download. Since that might be a little too complicated, you could give your friend these instructions, assuming Mac or Linux:
- Run
$ curl http://python-distribute.org/distribute_setup.py | python
. This provides you with tools you'll need to install the package manager. - Run
$ curl https://raw.github.com/pypa/pip/master/contrib/get-pip.py | python
. This installs the package manager. - Give your friend a list of the names of the third-party Python modules you used in your code. For purposes of this example, we'll say you used
requests
,twisted
, andboto
. - Your friend should run from command line
$ pip install <list of package names>
. In our example, that would look like$ pip install requests twisted boto
. - Run the Python code! The lines like
import boto
should then work, since your friend will have the packages installed on their computer.
-
That domain (python-distribute.org) no longer exists. Care to update your answer? May 26, 2017 at 2:41
The easi(er) way:
- Start with a clean virtual environment.
- Install packages that you need to develop your code.
- Once you are done, create a list of requirements for your project.
- Send this file (from step 3) to your friend.
Your friend simply does pip install -r thefile.txt
to get all the requirements for your application.
Here's an example:
D:\>virtualenv --no-site-packages myproject
The --no-site-packages flag is deprecated; it is now the default behavior.
New python executable in myproject\Scripts\python.exe
Installing setuptools................done.
Installing pip...................done.
D:\>myproject\Scripts\activate.bat
(myproject) D:\>pip install requests
Downloading/unpacking requests
Downloading requests-0.14.1.tar.gz (523Kb): 523Kb downloaded
Running setup.py egg_info for package requests
warning: no files found matching 'tests\*.'
Installing collected packages: requests
Running setup.py install for requests
warning: no files found matching 'tests\*.'
Successfully installed requests
Cleaning up...
(myproject) D:\>pip freeze > requirements.txt
(myproject) D:\>type requirements.txt
requests==0.14.1
-
-
It works wherever virtualenv is available (basically, wherever Python is available); it is not Windows specific. Oct 15, 2012 at 5:05
-
virtualenv does, but your command line commands are Windows-specific (
type
,myproject\Scripts\activate.bat
, etc.), and given that this is a question for newbies, I wouldn't want future ones reading to be confused about how to invoke virtualenv.– jdotjdotOct 15, 2012 at 13:43