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This is not a question of whether I should choose Anaconda or Miniconda. I want both.

I want the full featured Anaconda (with Spyder) installed for my script development, but then I want to minimize (without Spyder) a frozen version of my application. I'm thinking of also installing Miniconda and installing the bare minimum number of packages that are needed to male my application work (primarily OpenCV, Numpy, and PyQT) and then using cx_Freeze to create a distribution package (using Inno Setup for building a Windows installation package).

Is it possible to have both Anaconda and Miniconda on my Windows machine without having conflicts between the two? If so, are there any tricks I need to know?

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  • Possible duplicate of Anaconda vs miniconda
    – darthbith
    Jul 30, 2018 at 1:19
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    It is not recommended to do this (whether it is possible, I'm not sure). The solution is to use conda environments. Once you have installed either Miniconda or Anaconda, simply create a new environment and only install the "bare necessities" for your program.
    – darthbith
    Jul 30, 2018 at 1:19
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    Sure, why not? All Miniconda is is a Python + conda, whereas Anaconda is Python + conda + several hundred packages. Basically, Miniconda is Anaconda minus all of the packages. So just creating a new environment with Python as the only package gets you the equivalent of Miniconda.
    – darthbith
    Jul 30, 2018 at 11:44
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    I don't believe I tried both on the same machine. The second @darthbith response should provide you with what you are looking for - if you want both, install Anaconda and then create a new environment, which is the same as Miniconda. I was really new to Python at the time I asked the question and had not used environments before. Personally, I'd suggest installing Miniconda and add the packages you need rather than boating your system with a bunch of packages you'll never use.
    – slalomchip
    Jul 27, 2022 at 19:45
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    @dartbith - I liked your comments that Miniconda is basically Anaconda without all the packages. I was new to Python and Anaconda when I asked the question and didn't know much about environments. I still use Anaconda at work, but I abandoned it at home because of issues with multiprocessing. I found it was easier to fall back to the basic Python rather than getting multiprocessing working efficiently in a conda environment. I'll look into Mamba.
    – slalomchip
    Sep 12, 2022 at 22:52

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