Since version 4.6.0, Conda has improved its interoperability with pip:
Conda and pip have historically had difficulties getting along. Pip
hasn’t respected Conda’s environment constraints, while Conda has been
all too happy to clobber pip-installed software. It’s a mess. Conda
4.6.0 adds preview support for better interoperability. With this interoperability, Conda can use pip-installed packages to satisfy
dependencies, and can even remove pip-installed software cleanly and
replace them with Conda packages when appropriate. There’s still room
for improvement before pip and Conda are hunky-dory BFFs, but we hope
this is a good start. This feature is disabled by default right now
because it can significantly impact Conda’s performance. If you’d like
to try it, you can set this condarc setting:
conda config --set pip_interop_enabled True
So, the way to get PyPI packages into conda (at the time of writing this) seems to be:
pip install <package>
If you want conda to replace the PyPI packages with its own (where possible), just run:
conda update --all
Given that the above setting is made. Conda marks its own channels as higher priority than pip, thus packages will be replaced.