As @sinoroc suggested correct way of installing a package via pip is using separate process since pip may cause closing a thread or may require a restart of interpreter to load new installed package so this is the right way of using the API: subprocess.check_call([sys.executable, '-m', 'pip', 'install', 'SomeProject'])
but since Python allows to access internal API and you know what you're using the API for you may want to use internal API anyway eg. if you're building own GUI package manager with alternative resourcess like https://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/
Following soulution is OUT OF DATE, instead of downvoting suggest updates. see https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/7498 for reference.
UPDATE:
Since pip version 10.x there is no more
get_installed_distributions()
or
main
method under
import pip
instead use import pip._internal as pip
.
UPDATE ca. v.18 get_installed_distributions()
has been removed. Instead you may use generator freeze
like this:
from pip._internal.operations.freeze import freeze
print([package for package in freeze()])
# eg output ['pip==19.0.3']
If you want to use pip inside the Python interpreter, try this:
import pip
package_names=['selenium', 'requests'] #packages to install
pip.main(['install'] + package_names + ['--upgrade'])
# --upgrade to install or update existing packages
If you need to update every installed package, use following:
import pip
for i in pip.get_installed_distributions():
pip.main(['install', i.key, '--upgrade'])
If you want to stop installing other packages if any installation fails, use it in one single pip.main([])
call:
import pip
package_names = [i.key for i in pip.get_installed_distributions()]
pip.main(['install'] + package_names + ['--upgrade'])
Note: When you install from list in file with -r
/ --requirement
parameter you do NOT need open() function.
pip.main(['install', '-r', 'filename'])
Warning: Some parameters as simple --help
may cause python interpreter to stop.
Curiosity: By using pip.exe
you actually use python interpreter and pip module anyway. If you unpack pip.exe
or pip3.exe
regardless it's python 2.x or 3.x, inside is the SAME single file __main__.py
:
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys
from pip import main
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw?|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
sys.exit(main())
>>> pip install selenium
). not in regular Python interpreter. but it's still better to install pip packages with the terminal.pip
command to work from within Python, but the simple beginner answer is, don't do that; run thepip
command (or any other command which produces a SyntaxError in Python) at your command prompt, not in Python.