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I'm using Virtualenv with profit on my development environment with web.py, simplejson and other web oriented packages.
I'm going to develop a simple python client using Qt to reuse some Api developed with web.py.

Does anybody here had succesfully installed PyQt4 with Virtualenv?
Is it possible?

I've downloaded all the binaries and have PyQt4 installed globally on my python2.6 directory.
If I don't use --no-site--packages option, Virtualenv correctly includes PyQt4 in my new sandbox but, obviously, with all the global packages that I don't need.

Is there a clean way to prepare a new sandbox with --no-site--packages option and then add PyQt4 or PySide using pip, easy_install or some other magic trick?

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5 Answers

up vote 12 down vote accepted

It should be enough to create an empty virtualenv and then copy the contents of the .../site-packages/PyQt4 directories into it.

I suggest to install PyQt4 once globally, make a copy of the directory, uninstall it and then use this trick to create VEs.

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Thanks for your help. Copying the directory i can import PyQt4 from command line without error but i'm missing sip (ImportError: No module named sip ). Do i need to copy that too?Do you think pyuic4 will work? – systempuntoout Dec 25 '09 at 23:48
1  
Yes, that should fix it. I missed sip because it's in site-packages (no subdirectory). As for pyuic4, it should work. – Aaron Digulla Dec 26 '09 at 19:08
1  
I copied sip.so inside site-packages under sandbox python directory and it worked. – systempuntoout Dec 27 '09 at 6:29
Why wouldn't running standard installation procedure from wihtin virtualenv work? – Piotr Dobrogost Jan 9 '11 at 10:56
3  
@Piotr: Because the standard installation procedure on Windows opens a UI installer that doesn't care about virtualenv :-( On Linux, it depends whether you install it yourself or from a package. Packages also ignore virtualenv. I suggest that you try it and post an answer how to do it with easy_install. – Aaron Digulla Jan 10 '11 at 10:03
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I have the same problem. I use virtualenvwrapper, so I wrote this script to create a link to PyQt in every new virtual environment. Maybe is useful for someone else:

#!/bin/bash
# This hook is run after a new virtualenv is activated.
# ~/.virtualenvs/postmkvirtualenv

LIBS=( PyQt4 sip.so )

PYTHON_VERSION=python$(python -c "import sys; print (str(sys.version_info[0])+'.'+str(sys.version_info[1]))")
VAR=( $(which -a $PYTHON_VERSION) )

GET_PYTHON_LIB_CMD="from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_lib; print (get_python_lib())"
LIB_VIRTUALENV_PATH=$(python -c "$GET_PYTHON_LIB_CMD")
LIB_SYSTEM_PATH=$(${VAR[-1]} -c "$GET_PYTHON_LIB_CMD")

for LIB in ${LIBS[@]}
do
    ln -s $LIB_SYSTEM_PATH/$LIB $LIB_VIRTUALENV_PATH/$LIB 
done

link to gist

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Very helpful thanks – Alex May 11 '12 at 6:06
Life saver. Thanks! – Calvin Cheng Nov 1 '12 at 9:18
Hi, I found your answer via google, via other's comment, I reckon your script would work. I know very very little about bash(and I am using zsh), could you tell me how to run this script, please? – Sean Dec 1 '12 at 6:48
@Sean The script should be run by virtualenvwrapper automatically when you create a new virtualenv. If you have only zsh installed, you can replace the first line of the script #!/bin/bash with the path to your zsh executable, probably #!/bin/zsh, you can get this path with echo $PATH. This first line is the shebang, look here for an explanation: shebang wikipedia I don't use zsh, but probably the script works also with zsh – José Luis Dec 1 '12 at 11:05

I asked if it's possible to install PySide from within virtualenv on irc.freenode.net #pyside channel and got positive answer from hugopl. So I followed instructions from PySide Binaries for Microsoft Windows and it worked. The output is below.

Z:\virtualenv\pyside>Scripts\activate.bat

(pyside) Z:\virtualenv\pyside>where python
Z:\virtualenv\pyside\Scripts\python.exe

(pyside) Z:\virtualenv\pyside>easy_install PySide
install_dir Z:\virtualenv\pyside\Lib\site-packages\
Searching for PySide
Reading http://pypi.python.org/simple/PySide/
Reading http://www.pyside.org
Reading http://www.pyside.org/files/pkg/
Best match: PySide 1.0.0beta1qt471
Downloading http://www.pyside.org/files/pkg/PySide-1.0.0beta1qt471.win32-py2.6.exe
Processing PySide-1.0.0beta1qt471.win32-py2.6.exe
Deleting c:\users\piotr\appdata\local\temp\easy_install-fvfa7e\PySide-1.0.0beta1qt471-py2.6-win32.egg.tmp\EGG-INFO\scripts\py
ide-uic-script.py
Deleting c:\users\piotr\appdata\local\temp\easy_install-fvfa7e\PySide-1.0.0beta1qt471-py2.6-win32.egg.tmp\EGG-INFO\scripts\py
ide-uic.exe
creating 'c:\users\piotr\appdata\local\temp\easy_install-fvfa7e\PySide-1.0.0beta1qt471-py2.6-win32.egg' and adding 'c:\users\
iotr\appdata\local\temp\easy_install-fvfa7e\PySide-1.0.0beta1qt471-py2.6-win32.egg.tmp' to it
creating z:\virtualenv\pyside\lib\site-packages\PySide-1.0.0beta1qt471-py2.6-win32.egg
Extracting PySide-1.0.0beta1qt471-py2.6-win32.egg to z:\virtualenv\pyside\lib\site-packages
Adding PySide 1.0.0beta1qt471 to easy-install.pth file
Installing pyside-uic-script.pyc script to Z:\virtualenv\pyside\Scripts
Installing pyside_postinstall.py script to Z:\virtualenv\pyside\Scripts
Installing pyside_postinstall.pyc script to Z:\virtualenv\pyside\Scripts
Installing pyside-uic-script.py script to Z:\virtualenv\pyside\Scripts
Installing pyside-uic.exe script to Z:\virtualenv\pyside\Scripts

Installed z:\virtualenv\pyside\lib\site-packages\pyside-1.0.0beta1qt471-py2.6-win32.egg
Processing dependencies for PySide
Finished processing dependencies for PySide

(pyside) Z:\virtualenv\pyside>python Scripts\pyside_postinstall.py -install
Generating file Z:\virtualenv\pyside\Scripts\qt.conf...
The PySide extensions were successfully installed.
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This fails with "UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0x92 in position 594: ordinal not in range(128)" for me. – tylerthemiler Mar 29 '12 at 19:06
Note that this only works on Windows. bugs.pyside.org/show_bug.cgi?id=943 – James Jul 10 '12 at 17:42

Let's assume your virtualenv is named myProject and you're using virtualenvwrapper. A Unix platform is also assumed.

$ workon myProject
$ pip install --no-install SIP
$ pip install --no-install PyQt
$ cd ~/.virtualenvs/myProject/build/SIP
$ python configure.py
$ make
$ make install
$ cd ~/.virtualenvs/myProject/build/PyQt
$ python configure.py
$ make
$ make install
$ cd && rm -rf ~/.virtualenvs/myProject/build # Optional.
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Expanding on Aaron Digulla's answer, using git to get the file list right can be really handy. I usually do something like this (from an msysGit shell):

# Create temp git repo for the pristine Python installation
$ cd /c/Python27
$ git init -q
$ git add .
$ git commit -qm "Initial commit"

Then run the installer for PyQt4 (or whatever). After that, make a tarball of the files that the installer added and delete the temp git repo, as follows:

# Stage the PyQt4-installed files and feed a list of their names to tar
# (note that there's no need to actually commit them)
$ git add --all
$ git diff --cached --name-only | tar -jcf pyqt4.tar.bz2 --files-from=-
$ rm -rf .git

Then you can run PyQt4's uninstaller (if you don't want to clutter up your system Python), and simply untar pyqt4.tar.bz2 into your virtualenv folder. If you're already comfortable using git, this is a great way to ensure you get all the PyQt4-installed files.

NOTE: Installing PyQt4 using the packaged installer also installs SIP. If you actually want to use this SIP to create bindings for your own C/C++ code inside your virtualenv, you'll want to modify the paths in the sipconfig.py file after you copy it over. Otherwise, SIP's build system will still be pointing at the system Python folder (e.g., C:\Python32 or whatever), which won't work if you delete all the PyQt4-installed files from there. (If you don't have any intention of using SIP yourself, you can probably skip this.)

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pretty nice, thanks – systempuntoout Nov 16 '11 at 23:20

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