| .. highlight:: none |
| |
| .. _python.org/downloads: https://www.python.org/downloads/ |
| |
| .. _Microsoft Store app: https://apps.microsoft.com/detail/9NQ7512CXL7T |
| |
| .. _legacy launcher: https://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.14.0/win32/launcher.msi |
| |
| .. _using-on-windows: |
| |
| ************************* |
| Using Python on Windows |
| ************************* |
| |
| .. sectionauthor:: Steve Dower <steve.dower@python.org> |
| |
| This document aims to give an overview of Windows-specific behaviour you should |
| know about when using Python on Microsoft Windows. |
| |
| Unlike most Unix systems and services, Windows does not include a system |
| supported installation of Python. Instead, Python can be obtained from a number |
| of distributors, including directly from the CPython team. Each Python |
| distribution will have its own benefits and drawbacks, however, consistency with |
| other tools you are using is generally a worthwhile benefit. Before committing |
| to the process described here, we recommend investigating your existing tools to |
| see if they can provide Python directly. |
| |
| To obtain Python from the CPython team, use the Python Install Manager. This |
| is a standalone tool that makes Python available as global commands on your |
| Windows machine, integrates with the system, and supports updates over time. You |
| can download the Python Install Manager from `python.org/downloads`_ or through |
| the `Microsoft Store app`_. |
| |
| Once you have installed the Python Install Manager, the global ``python`` |
| command can be used from any terminal to launch your current latest version of |
| Python. This version may change over time as you add or remove different |
| versions, and the ``py list`` command will show which is current. |
| |
| In general, we recommend that you create a :ref:`virtual environment <tut-venv>` |
| for each project and run ``<env>\Scripts\Activate`` in your terminal to use it. |
| This provides isolation between projects, consistency over time, and ensures |
| that additional commands added by packages are also available in your session. |
| Create a virtual environment using ``python -m venv <env path>``. |
| |
| If the ``python`` or ``py`` commands do not seem to be working, please see the |
| :ref:`Troubleshooting <pymanager-troubleshoot>` section below. There are |
| sometimes additional manual steps required to configure your PC. |
| |
| Apart from using the Python install manager, Python can also be obtained as |
| NuGet packages. See :ref:`windows-nuget` below for more information on these |
| packages. |
| |
| The embeddable distros are minimal packages of Python suitable for embedding |
| into larger applications. They can be installed using the Python install |
| manager. See :ref:`windows-embeddable` below for more information on these |
| packages. |
| |
| |
| .. _pymanager: |
| .. _windows-store: |
| .. _setting-envvars: |
| .. _windows-path-mod: |
| .. _launcher: |
| |
| Python install manager |
| ====================== |
| |
| Installation |
| ------------ |
| |
| The Python install manager can be installed from the `Microsoft Store app`_ |
| or downloaded and installed from `python.org/downloads`_. The two versions are |
| identical. |
| |
| To install through the Store, simply click "Install". After it has completed, |
| open a terminal and type ``python`` to get started. |
| |
| To install the file downloaded from python.org, either double-click and select |
| "Install", or run ``Add-AppxPackage <path to MSIX>`` in Windows Powershell. |
| |
| After installation, the ``python``, ``py``, and ``pymanager`` commands should be |
| available. If you have existing installations of Python, or you have modified |
| your :envvar:`PATH` variable, you may need to remove them or undo the |
| modifications. See :ref:`pymanager-troubleshoot` for more help with fixing |
| non-working commands. |
| |
| When you first install a runtime, you will likely be prompted to add a directory |
| to your :envvar:`PATH`. This is optional, if you prefer to use the ``py`` |
| command, but is offered for those who prefer the full range of aliases (such |
| as ``python3.14.exe``) to be available. The directory will be |
| :file:`%LocalAppData%\\Python\\bin` by default, but may be customized by an |
| administrator. Click Start and search for "Edit environment variables for your |
| account" for the system settings page to add the path. |
| |
| Each Python runtime you install will have its own directory for scripts. These |
| also need to be added to :envvar:`PATH` if you want to use them. |
| |
| The Python install manager will be automatically updated to new releases. This |
| does not affect any installs of Python runtimes. Uninstalling the Python install |
| manager does not uninstall any Python runtimes. |
| |
| If you are not able to install an MSIX in your context, for example, you are |
| using automated deployment software that does not support it, or are targeting |
| Windows Server 2019, please see :ref:`pymanager-advancedinstall` below for more |
| information. |
| |
| |
| Basic use |
| --------- |
| |
| The recommended command for launching Python is ``python``, which will either |
| launch the version requested by the script being launched, an active virtual |
| environment, or the default installed version, which will be the latest stable |
| release unless configured otherwise. If no version is specifically requested and |
| no runtimes are installed at all, the current latest release will be installed |
| automatically. |
| |
| For all scenarios involving multiple runtime versions, the recommended command |
| is ``py``. This may be used anywhere in place of ``python`` or the older |
| ``py.exe`` launcher. By default, ``py`` matches the behaviour of ``python``, but |
| also allows command line options to select a specific version as well as |
| subcommands to manage installations. These are detailed below. |
| |
| Because the ``py`` command may already be taken by the previous version, there |
| is also an unambiguous ``pymanager`` command. Scripted installs that are |
| intending to use Python install manager should consider using ``pymanager``, due |
| to the lower chance of encountering a conflict with existing installs. The only |
| difference between the two commands is when running without any arguments: |
| ``py`` will install and launch your default interpreter, while ``pymanager`` |
| will display help (``pymanager exec ...`` provides equivalent behaviour to |
| ``py ...``). |
| |
| Each of these commands also has a windowed version that avoids creating a |
| console window. These are ``pyw``, ``pythonw`` and ``pymanagerw``. A ``python3`` |
| command is also included that mimics the ``python`` command. It is intended to |
| catch accidental uses of the typical POSIX command on Windows, but is not meant |
| to be widely used or recommended. |
| |
| To launch your default runtime, run ``python`` or ``py`` with the arguments you |
| want to be passed to the runtime (such as script files or the module to launch): |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py |
| ... |
| $> python my-script.py |
| ... |
| $> py -m this |
| ... |
| |
| The default runtime can be overridden with the :envvar:`PYTHON_MANAGER_DEFAULT` |
| environment variable, or a configuration file. See :ref:`pymanager-config` for |
| information about configuration settings. |
| |
| To launch a specific runtime, the ``py`` command accepts a ``-V:<TAG>`` option. |
| This option must be specified before any others. The tag is part or all of the |
| identifier for the runtime; for those from the CPython team, it looks like the |
| version, potentially with the platform. For compatibility, the ``V:`` may be |
| omitted in cases where the tag refers to an official release and starts with |
| ``3``. |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py -V:3.14 ... |
| $> py -V:3-arm64 ... |
| |
| Runtimes from other distributors may require the *company* to be included as |
| well. This should be separated from the tag by a slash, and may be a prefix. |
| Specifying the company is optional when it is ``PythonCore``, and specifying the |
| tag is optional (but not the slash) when you want the latest release from a |
| specific company. |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py -V:Distributor\1.0 ... |
| $> py -V:distrib/ ... |
| |
| If no version is specified, but a script file is passed, the script will be |
| inspected for a *shebang line*. This is a special format for the first line in |
| a file that allows overriding the command. See :ref:`pymanager-shebang` for more |
| information. When there is no shebang line, or it cannot be resolved, the script |
| will be launched with the default runtime. |
| |
| If you are running in an active virtual environment, have not requested a |
| particular version, and there is no shebang line, the default runtime will be |
| that virtual environment. In this scenario, the ``python`` command was likely |
| already overridden and none of these checks occurred. However, this behaviour |
| ensures that the ``py`` command can be used interchangeably. |
| |
| When you launch either ``python`` or ``py`` but do not have any runtimes |
| installed, and the requested version is the default, it will be installed |
| automatically and then launched. Otherwise, the requested version will be |
| installed if automatic installation is configured (most likely by setting |
| ``PYTHON_MANAGER_AUTOMATIC_INSTALL`` to ``true``), or if the ``py exec`` or |
| ``pymanager exec`` forms of the command were used. |
| |
| |
| Command help |
| ------------ |
| |
| The ``py help`` command will display the full list of supported commands, along |
| with their options. Any command may be passed the ``-?`` option to display its |
| help, or its name passed to ``py help``. |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py help |
| $> py help install |
| $> py install /? |
| |
| |
| All commands support some common options, which will be shown by ``py help``. |
| These options must be specified after any subcommand. Specifying ``-v`` or |
| ``--verbose`` will increase the amount of output shown, and ``-vv`` will |
| increase it further for debugging purposes. Passing ``-q`` or ``--quiet`` will |
| reduce output, and ``-qq`` will reduce it further. |
| |
| The ``--config=<PATH>`` option allows specifying a configuration file to |
| override multiple settings at once. See :ref:`pymanager-config` below for more |
| information about these files. |
| |
| |
| Listing runtimes |
| ---------------- |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py list [-f=|--format=<FMT>] [-1|--one] [--online|-s=|--source=<URL>] [<TAG>...] |
| |
| The list of installed runtimes can be seen using ``py list``. A filter may be |
| added in the form of one or more tags (with or without company specifier), and |
| each may include a ``<``, ``<=``, ``>=`` or ``>`` prefix to restrict to a range. |
| |
| A range of formats are supported, and can be passed as the ``--format=<FMT>`` or |
| ``-f <FMT>`` option. Formats include ``table`` (a user friendly table view), |
| ``csv`` (comma-separated table), ``json`` (a single JSON blob), ``jsonl`` (one |
| JSON blob per result), ``exe`` (just the executable path), ``prefix`` (just the |
| prefix path). |
| |
| The ``--one`` or ``-1`` option only displays a single result. If the default |
| runtime is included, it will be the one. Otherwise, the "best" result is shown |
| ("best" is deliberately vaguely defined, but will usually be the most recent |
| version). The result shown by ``py list --one <TAG>`` will match the runtime |
| that would be launched by ``py -V:<TAG>``. |
| |
| The ``--only-managed`` option excludes results that were not installed by the |
| Python install manager. This is useful when determining which runtimes may be |
| updated or uninstalled through the ``py`` command. |
| |
| The ``--online`` option is short for passing ``--source=<URL>`` with the default |
| source. Passing either of these options will search the online index for |
| runtimes that can be installed. The result shown by ``py list --online --one |
| <TAG>`` will match the runtime that would be installed by ``py install <TAG>``. |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py list --online 3.14 |
| |
| For compatibility with the old launcher, the ``--list``, ``--list-paths``, |
| ``-0`` and ``-0p`` commands (e.g. ``py -0p``) are retained. They do not allow |
| additional options, and will produce legacy formatted output. |
| |
| |
| Installing runtimes |
| ------------------- |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py install [-s=|--source=<URL>] [-f|--force] [-u|--update] [--dry-run] [<TAG>...] |
| |
| New runtime versions may be added using ``py install``. One or more tags may be |
| specified, and the special tag ``default`` may be used to select the default. |
| Ranges are not supported for installation. |
| |
| The ``--source=<URL>`` option allows overriding the online index that is used to |
| obtain runtimes. This may be used with an offline index, as shown in |
| :ref:`pymanager-offline`. |
| |
| Passing ``--force`` will ignore any cached files and remove any existing install |
| to replace it with the specified one. |
| |
| Passing ``--update`` will replace existing installs if the new version is newer. |
| Otherwise, they will be left. If no tags are provided with ``--update``, all |
| installs managed by the Python install manager will be updated if newer versions |
| are available. Updates will remove any modifications made to the install, |
| including globally installed packages, but virtual environments will continue to |
| work. |
| |
| Passing ``--dry-run`` will generate output and logs, but will not modify any |
| installs. |
| |
| In addition to the above options, the ``--target`` option will extract the |
| runtime to the specified directory instead of doing a normal install. |
| This is useful for embedding runtimes into larger applications. |
| Unlike a normal install, ``py`` will not be aware of the extracted runtime, |
| and no Start menu or other shortcuts will be created. |
| To launch the runtime, directly execute the main executable (typically |
| ``python.exe``) in the target directory. |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py install ... [-t=|--target=<PATH>] <TAG> |
| |
| |
| .. _pymanager-offline: |
| |
| Offline installs |
| ---------------- |
| |
| To perform offline installs of Python, you will need to first create an offline |
| index on a machine that has network access. |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py install --download=<PATH> ... <TAG>... |
| |
| The ``--download=<PATH>`` option will download the packages for the listed tags |
| and create a directory containing them and an ``index.json`` file suitable for |
| later installation. This entire directory can be moved to the offline machine |
| and used to install one or more of the bundled runtimes: |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py install --source="<PATH>\index.json" <TAG>... |
| |
| The Python install manager can be installed by downloading its installer and |
| moving it to another machine before installing. |
| |
| Alternatively, the ZIP files in an offline index directory can simply be |
| transferred to another machine and extracted. This will not register the install |
| in any way, and so it must be launched by directly referencing the executables |
| in the extracted directory, but it is sometimes a preferable approach in cases |
| where installing the Python install manager is not possible or convenient. |
| |
| In this way, Python runtimes can be installed and managed on a machine without |
| access to the internet. |
| |
| |
| Uninstalling runtimes |
| --------------------- |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py uninstall [-y|--yes] <TAG>... |
| |
| Runtimes may be removed using the ``py uninstall`` command. One or more tags |
| must be specified. Ranges are not supported here. |
| |
| The ``--yes`` option bypasses the confirmation prompt before uninstalling. |
| |
| Instead of passing tags individually, the ``--purge`` option may be specified. |
| This will remove all runtimes managed by the Python install manager, including |
| cleaning up the Start menu, registry, and any download caches. Runtimes that |
| were not installed by the Python install manager will not be impacted, and |
| neither will manually created configuration files. |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py uninstall [-y|--yes] --purge |
| |
| The Python install manager can be uninstalled through the Windows "Installed |
| apps" settings page. This does not remove any runtimes, and they will still be |
| usable, though the global ``python`` and ``py`` commands will be removed. |
| Reinstalling the Python install manager will allow you to manage these runtimes |
| again. To completely clean up all Python runtimes, run with ``--purge`` before |
| uninstalling the Python install manager. |
| |
| .. _pymanager-config: |
| |
| Configuration |
| ------------- |
| |
| Python install manager is configured with a hierarchy of configuration files, |
| environment variables, command-line options, and registry settings. In general, |
| configuration files have the ability to configure everything, including the |
| location of other configuration files, while registry settings are |
| administrator-only and will override configuration files. Command-line options |
| override all other settings, but not every option is available. |
| |
| This section will describe the defaults, but be aware that modified or |
| overridden installs may resolve settings differently. |
| |
| A global configuration file may be configured by an administrator, and would be |
| read first. The user configuration file is stored at |
| :file:`%AppData%\\Python\\pymanager.json` |
| (note that this location is under ``Roaming``, not ``Local``) and is read next, |
| overwriting any settings from earlier files. An additional configuration file |
| may be specified as the ``PYTHON_MANAGER_CONFIG`` environment variable or the |
| ``--config`` command line option (but not both). |
| These locations may be modified by administrative customization options listed |
| later. |
| |
| The following settings are those that are considered likely to be modified in |
| normal use. Later sections list those that are intended for administrative |
| customization. |
| |
| .. Sphinx bug with text writer; remove widths & caption temporarily |
| .. :widths: 2, 2, 4 |
| |
| .. rubric:: Standard configuration options |
| |
| .. list-table:: |
| :header-rows: 1 |
| |
| * - Config Key |
| - Environment Variable |
| - Description |
| |
| * - ``default_tag`` |
| - .. envvar:: PYTHON_MANAGER_DEFAULT |
| - The preferred default version to launch or install. |
| By default, this is interpreted as the most recent non-prerelease version |
| from the CPython team. |
| |
| * - ``default_platform`` |
| - ``PYTHON_MANAGER_DEFAULT_PLATFORM`` |
| - The preferred default platform to launch or install. |
| This is treated as a suffix to the specified tag, such that ``py -V:3.14`` |
| would prefer an install for ``3.14-64`` if it exists |
| (and ``default_platform`` is ``-64``), |
| but will use ``3.14`` if no tagged install exists. |
| |
| * - ``logs_dir`` |
| - ``PYTHON_MANAGER_LOGS`` |
| - The location where log files are written. |
| By default, :file:`%TEMP%`. |
| |
| * - ``automatic_install`` |
| - ``PYTHON_MANAGER_AUTOMATIC_INSTALL`` |
| - True to allow automatic installs when using ``py exec`` to launch. |
| Other commands will not automatically install. |
| By default, true. |
| |
| * - ``include_unmanaged`` |
| - ``PYTHON_MANAGER_INCLUDE_UNMANAGED`` |
| - True to allow listing and launching runtimes that were not installed |
| by the Python install manager, or false to exclude them. |
| By default, true. |
| |
| * - ``shebang_can_run_anything`` |
| - ``PYTHON_MANAGER_SHEBANG_CAN_RUN_ANYTHING`` |
| - True to allow shebangs in ``.py`` files to launch applications other than |
| Python runtimes, or false to prevent it. |
| By default, true. |
| |
| * - ``log_level`` |
| - ``PYMANAGER_VERBOSE``, ``PYMANAGER_DEBUG`` |
| - Set the default level of output (0-50). |
| By default, 20. |
| Lower values produce more output. |
| The environment variables are boolean, and may produce additional |
| output during startup that is later suppressed by other configuration. |
| |
| * - ``confirm`` |
| - ``PYTHON_MANAGER_CONFIRM`` |
| - True to confirm certain actions before taking them (such as uninstall), |
| or false to skip the confirmation. |
| By default, true. |
| |
| * - ``install.source`` |
| - ``PYTHON_MANAGER_SOURCE_URL`` |
| - Override the index feed to obtain new installs from. |
| |
| * - ``list.format`` |
| - ``PYTHON_MANAGER_LIST_FORMAT`` |
| - Specify the default format used by the ``py list`` command. |
| By default, ``table``. |
| |
| * - ``install_dir`` |
| - (none) |
| - Specify the root directory that runtimes will be installed into. |
| If you change this setting, previously installed runtimes will not be |
| usable unless you move them to the new location. |
| |
| * - ``global_dir`` |
| - (none) |
| - Specify the directory where global commands (such as ``python3.14.exe``) |
| are stored. |
| This directory should be added to your :envvar:`PATH` to make the |
| commands available from your terminal. |
| |
| * - ``download_dir`` |
| - (none) |
| - Specify the directory where downloaded files are stored. |
| This directory is a temporary cache, and can be cleaned up from time to |
| time. |
| |
| Dotted names should be nested inside JSON objects, for example, ``list.format`` |
| would be specified as ``{"list": {"format": "table"}}``. |
| |
| .. _pymanager-shebang: |
| |
| Shebang lines |
| ------------- |
| |
| If the first line of a script file starts with ``#!``, it is known as a |
| "shebang" line. Linux and other Unix like operating systems have native |
| support for such lines and they are commonly used on such systems to indicate |
| how a script should be executed. The ``python`` and ``py`` commands allow the |
| same facilities to be used with Python scripts on Windows. |
| |
| To allow shebang lines in Python scripts to be portable between Unix and |
| Windows, a number of 'virtual' commands are supported to specify which |
| interpreter to use. The supported virtual commands are: |
| |
| * ``/usr/bin/env <ALIAS>`` |
| * ``/usr/bin/env -S <ALIAS>`` |
| * ``/usr/bin/<ALIAS>`` |
| * ``/usr/local/bin/<ALIAS>`` |
| * ``<ALIAS>`` |
| |
| For example, if the first line of your script starts with |
| |
| .. code-block:: sh |
| |
| #! /usr/bin/python |
| |
| The default Python or an active virtual environment will be located and used. |
| As many Python scripts written to work on Unix will already have this line, |
| you should find these scripts can be used by the launcher without modification. |
| If you are writing a new script on Windows which you hope will be useful on |
| Unix, you should use one of the shebang lines starting with ``/usr``. |
| |
| Any of the above virtual commands can have ``<ALIAS>`` replaced by an alias from |
| an installed runtime. That is, any command generated in the global aliases |
| directory (which you may have added to your :envvar:`PATH` environment variable) |
| can be used in a shebang, even if it is not on your :envvar:`PATH`. This allows |
| the use of shebangs like ``/usr/bin/python3.12`` to select a particular runtime. |
| |
| If no runtimes are installed, or if automatic installation is enabled, the |
| requested runtime will be installed if necessary. See :ref:`pymanager-config` |
| for information about configuration settings. |
| |
| The ``/usr/bin/env`` form of shebang line will also search the :envvar:`PATH` |
| environment variable for unrecognized commands. This corresponds to the |
| behaviour of the Unix ``env`` program, which performs the same search, but |
| prefers launching known Python commands. A warning may be displayed when |
| searching for arbitrary executables, and this search may be disabled by the |
| ``shebang_can_run_anything`` configuration option. |
| |
| Shebang lines that do not match any of patterns are treated as *Windows* |
| executable paths that are absolute or relative to the directory containing the |
| script file. This is a convenience for Windows-only scripts, such as those |
| generated by an installer, since the behavior is not compatible with Unix-style |
| shells. These paths may be quoted, and may include multiple arguments, after |
| which the path to the script and any additional arguments will be appended. |
| This functionality may be disabled by the ``shebang_can_run_anything`` |
| configuration option. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| The behaviour of shebangs in the Python install manager is subtly different |
| from the previous ``py.exe`` launcher, and the old configuration options no |
| longer apply. If you are specifically reliant on the old behaviour or |
| configuration, we recommend installing the `legacy launcher`_. The legacy |
| launcher's ``py`` command will override PyManager's one by default, and you |
| will need to use ``pymanager`` commands for installing and uninstalling. |
| |
| .. _Add-AppxPackage: https://learn.microsoft.com/powershell/module/appx/add-appxpackage |
| |
| .. _Remove-AppxPackage: https://learn.microsoft.com/powershell/module/appx/remove-appxpackage |
| |
| .. _Add-AppxProvisionedPackage: https://learn.microsoft.com/powershell/module/dism/add-appxprovisionedpackage |
| |
| .. _PackageManager: https://learn.microsoft.com/uwp/api/windows.management.deployment.packagemanager |
| |
| .. _pymanager-advancedinstall: |
| |
| Advanced installation |
| --------------------- |
| |
| For situations where an MSIX cannot be installed, such as some older |
| administrative distribution platforms, there is an MSI available from the |
| python.org downloads page. This MSI has no user interface, and can only perform |
| per-machine installs to its default location in Program Files. It will attempt |
| to modify the system :envvar:`PATH` environment variable to include this install |
| location, but be sure to validate this on your configuration. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| Windows Server 2019 is the only version of Windows that CPython supports that |
| does not support MSIX. For Windows Server 2019, you should use the MSI. |
| |
| Be aware that the MSI package does not bundle any runtimes, and so is not |
| suitable for installs into offline environments without also creating an offline |
| install index. See :ref:`pymanager-offline` and :ref:`pymanager-admin-config` |
| for information on handling these scenarios. |
| |
| Runtimes installed by the MSI are shared with those installed by the MSIX, and |
| are all per-user only. The Python install manager does not support installing |
| runtimes per-machine. To emulate a per-machine install, you can use ``py install |
| --target=<shared location>`` as administrator and add your own system-wide |
| modifications to :envvar:`PATH`, the registry, or the Start menu. |
| |
| When the MSIX is installed, but commands are not available in the :envvar:`PATH` |
| environment variable, they can be found under |
| :file:`%LocalAppData%\\Microsoft\\WindowsApps\\PythonSoftwareFoundation.PythonManager_3847v3x7pw1km` |
| or |
| :file:`%LocalAppData%\\Microsoft\\WindowsApps\\PythonSoftwareFoundation.PythonManager_qbz5n2kfra8p0`, |
| depending on whether it was installed from python.org or through the Windows |
| Store. Attempting to run the executable directly from Program Files is not |
| recommended. |
| |
| To programmatically install the Python install manager, it is easiest to use |
| WinGet, which is included with all supported versions of Windows: |
| |
| .. code-block:: powershell |
| |
| $> winget install 9NQ7512CXL7T -e --accept-package-agreements --disable-interactivity |
| |
| # Optionally run the configuration checker and accept all changes |
| $> py install --configure -y |
| |
| To download the Python install manager and install on another machine, the |
| following WinGet command will download the required files from the Store to your |
| Downloads directory (add ``-d <location>`` to customize the output location). |
| This also generates a YAML file that appears to be unnecessary, as the |
| downloaded MSIX can be installed by launching or using the commands below. |
| |
| .. code-block:: powershell |
| |
| $> winget download 9NQ7512CXL7T -e --skip-license --accept-package-agreements --accept-source-agreements |
| |
| To programmatically install or uninstall an MSIX using only PowerShell, the |
| `Add-AppxPackage`_ and `Remove-AppxPackage`_ PowerShell cmdlets are recommended: |
| |
| .. code-block:: powershell |
| |
| $> Add-AppxPackage C:\Downloads\python-manager-25.0.msix |
| ... |
| $> Get-AppxPackage PythonSoftwareFoundation.PythonManager | Remove-AppxPackage |
| |
| The latest release can be downloaded and installed by Windows by passing the |
| AppInstaller file to the Add-AppxPackage command. This installs using the MSIX |
| on python.org, and is only recommended for cases where installing via the Store |
| (interactively or using WinGet) is not possible. |
| |
| .. code-block:: powershell |
| |
| $> Add-AppxPackage -AppInstallerFile https://www.python.org/ftp/python/pymanager/pymanager.appinstaller |
| |
| Other tools and APIs may also be used to provision an MSIX package for all users |
| on a machine, but Python does not consider this a supported scenario. We suggest |
| looking into the PowerShell `Add-AppxProvisionedPackage`_ cmdlet, the native |
| Windows `PackageManager`_ class, or the documentation and support for your |
| deployment tool. |
| |
| Regardless of the install method, users will still need to install their own |
| copies of Python itself, as there is no way to trigger those installs without |
| being a logged in user. When using the MSIX, the latest version of Python will |
| be available for all users to install without network access. |
| |
| Note that the MSIX downloadable from the Store and from the Python website are |
| subtly different and cannot be installed at the same time. Wherever possible, |
| we suggest using the above WinGet commands to download the package from the |
| Store to reduce the risk of setting up conflicting installs. There are no |
| licensing restrictions on the Python install manager that would prevent using |
| the Store package in this way. |
| |
| |
| .. _pymanager-admin-config: |
| |
| Administrative configuration |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| There are a number of options that may be useful for administrators to override |
| configuration of the Python install manager. These can be used to provide local |
| caching, disable certain shortcut types, override bundled content. All of the |
| above configuration options may be set, as well as those below. |
| |
| Configuration options may be overridden in the registry by setting values under |
| :file:`HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\\Software\\Policies\\Python\\PyManager`, where the |
| value name matches the configuration key and the value type is ``REG_SZ``. Note |
| that this key can itself be customized, but only by modifying the core config |
| file distributed with the Python install manager. We recommend, however, that |
| registry values are used only to set ``base_config`` to a JSON file containing |
| the full set of overrides. Registry key overrides will replace any other |
| configured setting, while ``base_config`` allows users to further modify |
| settings they may need. |
| |
| Note that most settings with environment variables support those variables |
| because their default setting specifies the variable. If you override them, the |
| environment variable will no longer work, unless you override it with another |
| one. For example, the default value of ``confirm`` is literally |
| ``%PYTHON_MANAGER_CONFIRM%``, which will resolve the variable at load time. If |
| you override the value to ``yes``, then the environment variable will no longer |
| be used. If you override the value to ``%CONFIRM%``, then that environment |
| variable will be used instead. |
| |
| Configuration settings that are paths are interpreted as relative to the |
| directory containing the configuration file that specified them. |
| |
| .. Sphinx bug with text writer; remove widths & caption temporarily |
| .. :widths: 1, 4 |
| |
| .. rubric:: Administrative configuration options |
| |
| .. list-table:: |
| :header-rows: 1 |
| |
| * - Config Key |
| - Description |
| |
| * - ``base_config`` |
| - The highest priority configuration file to read. |
| Note that only the built-in configuration file and the registry can |
| modify this setting. |
| |
| * - ``user_config`` |
| - The second configuration file to read. |
| |
| * - ``additional_config`` |
| - The third configuration file to read. |
| |
| * - ``registry_override_key`` |
| - Registry location to check for overrides. |
| Note that only the built-in configuration file can modify this setting. |
| |
| * - ``bundled_dir`` |
| - Read-only directory containing locally cached files. |
| |
| * - ``install.fallback_source`` |
| - Path or URL to an index to consult when the main index cannot be accessed. |
| |
| * - ``install.enable_shortcut_kinds`` |
| - Comma-separated list of shortcut kinds to allow (e.g. ``"pep514,start"``). |
| Enabled shortcuts may still be disabled by ``disable_shortcut_kinds``. |
| |
| * - ``install.disable_shortcut_kinds`` |
| - Comma-separated list of shortcut kinds to exclude |
| (e.g. ``"pep514,start"``). |
| Disabled shortcuts are not reactivated by ``enable_shortcut_kinds``. |
| |
| * - ``pep514_root`` |
| - Registry location to read and write PEP 514 entries into. |
| By default, :file:`HKEY_CURRENT_USER\\Software\\Python`. |
| |
| * - ``start_folder`` |
| - Start menu folder to write shortcuts into. |
| By default, ``Python``. |
| This path is relative to the user's Programs folder. |
| |
| * - ``virtual_env`` |
| - Path to the active virtual environment. |
| By default, this is ``%VIRTUAL_ENV%``, but may be set empty |
| to disable venv detection. |
| |
| * - ``shebang_can_run_anything_silently`` |
| - True to suppress visible warnings when a shebang launches an application |
| other than a Python runtime. |
| |
| .. _install-freethreaded-windows: |
| |
| Installing free-threaded binaries |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.13 |
| |
| Pre-built distributions of the free-threaded build are available |
| by installing tags with the ``t`` suffix. |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py install 3.14t |
| $> py install 3.14t-arm64 |
| $> py install 3.14t-32 |
| |
| This will install and register as normal. If you have no other runtimes |
| installed, then ``python`` will launch this one. Otherwise, you will need to use |
| ``py -V:3.14t ...`` or, if you have added the global aliases directory to your |
| :envvar:`PATH` environment variable, the ``python3.14t.exe`` commands. |
| |
| .. _pymanager-troubleshoot: |
| |
| Troubleshooting |
| --------------- |
| |
| If your Python install manager does not seem to be working correctly, please |
| work through these tests and fixes to see if it helps. If not, please report an |
| issue at `our bug tracker <https://github.com/python/cpython/issues>`_, |
| including any relevant log files (written to your :file:`%TEMP%` directory by |
| default). |
| |
| .. Sphinx bug with text writer; remove widths & caption temporarily |
| .. :widths: 1, 1 |
| |
| .. rubric:: Troubleshooting |
| |
| .. list-table:: |
| :header-rows: 1 |
| |
| * - Symptom |
| - Things to try |
| |
| * - ``python`` gives me a "command not found" error or opens the Store app |
| when I type it in my terminal. |
| - Did you :ref:`install the Python install manager <pymanager>`? |
| |
| * - |
| - Click Start, open "Manage app execution aliases", and check that the |
| aliases for "Python (default)" are enabled. |
| If they already are, try disabling and re-enabling to refresh the command. |
| The "Python (default windowed)" and "Python install manager" commands |
| may also need refreshing. |
| |
| * - |
| - Check that the ``py`` and ``pymanager`` commands work. |
| |
| * - |
| - Ensure your :envvar:`PATH` variable contains the entry for |
| ``%UserProfile%\AppData\Local\Microsoft\WindowsApps``. |
| The operating system includes this entry once by default, after other |
| user paths. If removed, shortcuts will not be found. |
| |
| * - ``py`` gives me a "command not found" error when I type it in my terminal. |
| - Did you :ref:`install the Python install manager <pymanager>`? |
| |
| * - |
| - Click Start, open "Manage app execution aliases", and check that the |
| aliases for "Python (default)" are enabled. |
| If they already are, try disabling and re-enabling to refresh the command. |
| The "Python (default windowed)" and "Python install manager" commands |
| may also need refreshing. |
| |
| * - |
| - Ensure your :envvar:`PATH` variable contains the entry for |
| ``%UserProfile%\AppData\Local\Microsoft\WindowsApps``. |
| The operating system includes this entry once by default, after other |
| user paths. If removed, shortcuts will not be found. |
| |
| * - ``py`` gives me a "can't open file" error when I type commands in my |
| terminal. |
| - This usually means you have the legacy launcher installed and |
| it has priority over the Python install manager. |
| To remove, click Start, open "Installed apps", |
| search for "Python launcher" and uninstall it. |
| |
| * - ``python`` doesn't launch the same runtime as ``py`` |
| - Click Start, open "Installed apps", look for any existing Python runtimes, |
| and either remove them or Modify and disable the :envvar:`PATH` options. |
| |
| * - |
| - Click Start, open "Manage app execution aliases", and check that your |
| ``python.exe`` alias is set to "Python (default)" |
| |
| * - ``python`` and ``py`` don't launch the runtime I expect |
| - Check your :envvar:`PYTHON_MANAGER_DEFAULT` environment variable |
| or ``default_tag`` configuration. |
| The ``py list`` command will show your default based on these settings. |
| |
| * - |
| - Installs that are managed by the Python install manager will be chosen |
| ahead of unmanaged installs. |
| Use ``py install`` to install the runtime you expect, |
| or configure your default tag. |
| |
| * - |
| - Prerelease and experimental installs that are not managed by the Python |
| install manager may be chosen ahead of stable releases. |
| Configure your default tag or uninstall the prerelease runtime |
| and reinstall it using ``py install``. |
| |
| * - ``pythonw`` or ``pyw`` don't launch the same runtime as ``python`` or ``py`` |
| - Click Start, open "Manage app execution aliases", and check that your |
| ``pythonw.exe`` and ``pyw.exe`` aliases are consistent with your others. |
| |
| * - ``pip`` gives me a "command not found" error when I type it in my terminal. |
| - Have you activated a virtual environment? |
| Run the ``.venv\Scripts\activate`` script in your terminal to activate. |
| |
| * - |
| - The package may be available but missing the generated executable. |
| We recommend using the ``python -m pip`` command instead, |
| or alternatively the ``python -m pip install --force pip`` command |
| will recreate the executables and show you the path to |
| add to :envvar:`PATH`. |
| These scripts are separated for each runtime, and so you may need to |
| add multiple paths. |
| |
| * - Typing ``script-name.py`` in the terminal opens in a new window. |
| - This is a known limitation of the operating system. Either specify ``py`` |
| before the script name, create a batch file containing ``@py "%~dpn0.py" %*`` |
| with the same name as the script, or install the `legacy launcher`_ |
| and select it as the association for scripts. |
| |
| * - Drag-dropping files onto a script doesn't work |
| - This is a known limitation of the operating system. It is supported with |
| the `legacy launcher`_, or with the Python install manager when installed |
| from the MSI. |
| |
| * - I have installed the Python install manager multiple times. |
| - It is possible to install from the Store or WinGet, from the MSIX on |
| the Python website, and from the MSI, all at once. |
| They are all compatible and will share configuration and runtimes. |
| |
| * - |
| - See the earlier :ref:`pymanager-advancedinstall` section for ways to |
| uninstall the install manager other than the typical Installed Apps |
| (Add and Remove Programs) settings page. |
| |
| * - My old ``py.ini`` settings no longer work. |
| - The new Python install manager no longer supports this configuration file |
| or its settings, and so it will be ignored. |
| See :ref:`pymanager-config` for information about configuration settings. |
| |
| .. _windows-embeddable: |
| |
| The embeddable package |
| ====================== |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.5 |
| |
| The embedded distribution is a ZIP file containing a minimal Python environment. |
| It is intended for acting as part of another application, rather than being |
| directly accessed by end-users. |
| |
| To install an embedded distribution, we recommend using ``py install`` with the |
| ``--target`` option: |
| |
| .. code:: |
| |
| $> py install 3.14-embed --target=<directory> |
| |
| When extracted, the embedded distribution is (almost) fully isolated from the |
| user's system, including environment variables, system registry settings, and |
| installed packages. The standard library is included as pre-compiled and |
| optimized ``.pyc`` files in a ZIP, and ``python3.dll``, ``python313.dll``, |
| ``python.exe`` and ``pythonw.exe`` are all provided. Tcl/tk (including all |
| dependents, such as Idle), pip and the Python documentation are not included. |
| |
| A default ``._pth`` file is included, which further restricts the default search |
| paths (as described below in :ref:`windows_finding_modules`). This file is |
| intended for embedders to modify as necessary. |
| |
| Third-party packages should be installed by the application installer alongside |
| the embedded distribution. Using pip to manage dependencies as for a regular |
| Python installation is not supported with this distribution, though with some |
| care it may be possible to include and use pip for automatic updates. In |
| general, third-party packages should be treated as part of the application |
| ("vendoring") so that the developer can ensure compatibility with newer |
| versions before providing updates to users. |
| |
| The two recommended use cases for this distribution are described below. |
| |
| Python application |
| ------------------ |
| |
| An application written in Python does not necessarily require users to be aware |
| of that fact. The embedded distribution may be used in this case to include a |
| private version of Python in an install package. Depending on how transparent it |
| should be (or conversely, how professional it should appear), there are two |
| options. |
| |
| Using a specialized executable as a launcher requires some coding, but provides |
| the most transparent experience for users. With a customized launcher, there are |
| no obvious indications that the program is running on Python: icons can be |
| customized, company and version information can be specified, and file |
| associations behave properly. In most cases, a custom launcher should simply be |
| able to call ``Py_Main`` with a hard-coded command line. |
| |
| The simpler approach is to provide a batch file or generated shortcut that |
| directly calls the ``python.exe`` or ``pythonw.exe`` with the required |
| command-line arguments. In this case, the application will appear to be Python |
| and not its actual name, and users may have trouble distinguishing it from other |
| running Python processes or file associations. |
| |
| With the latter approach, packages should be installed as directories alongside |
| the Python executable to ensure they are available on the path. With the |
| specialized launcher, packages can be located in other locations as there is an |
| opportunity to specify the search path before launching the application. |
| |
| Embedding Python |
| ---------------- |
| |
| Applications written in native code often require some form of scripting |
| language, and the embedded Python distribution can be used for this purpose. In |
| general, the majority of the application is in native code, and some part will |
| either invoke ``python.exe`` or directly use ``python3.dll``. For either case, |
| extracting the embedded distribution to a subdirectory of the application |
| installation is sufficient to provide a loadable Python interpreter. |
| |
| As with the application use, packages can be installed to any location as there |
| is an opportunity to specify search paths before initializing the interpreter. |
| Otherwise, there is no fundamental differences between using the embedded |
| distribution and a regular installation. |
| |
| |
| .. _windows-nuget: |
| |
| The nuget.org packages |
| ====================== |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.5.2 |
| |
| The nuget.org package is a reduced size Python environment intended for use on |
| continuous integration and build systems that do not have a system-wide |
| install of Python. While nuget is "the package manager for .NET", it also works |
| perfectly fine for packages containing build-time tools. |
| |
| Visit `nuget.org <https://www.nuget.org/>`_ for the most up-to-date information |
| on using nuget. What follows is a summary that is sufficient for Python |
| developers. |
| |
| The ``nuget.exe`` command line tool may be downloaded directly from |
| ``https://aka.ms/nugetclidl``, for example, using curl or PowerShell. With the |
| tool, the latest version of Python for 64-bit or 32-bit machines is installed |
| using:: |
| |
| nuget.exe install python -ExcludeVersion -OutputDirectory . |
| nuget.exe install pythonx86 -ExcludeVersion -OutputDirectory . |
| |
| To select a particular version, add a ``-Version 3.x.y``. The output directory |
| may be changed from ``.``, and the package will be installed into a |
| subdirectory. By default, the subdirectory is named the same as the package, |
| and without the ``-ExcludeVersion`` option this name will include the specific |
| version installed. Inside the subdirectory is a ``tools`` directory that |
| contains the Python installation: |
| |
| .. code-block:: doscon |
| |
| # Without -ExcludeVersion |
| > .\python.3.5.2\tools\python.exe -V |
| Python 3.5.2 |
| |
| # With -ExcludeVersion |
| > .\python\tools\python.exe -V |
| Python 3.5.2 |
| |
| In general, nuget packages are not upgradeable, and newer versions should be |
| installed side-by-side and referenced using the full path. Alternatively, |
| delete the package directory manually and install it again. Many CI systems |
| will do this automatically if they do not preserve files between builds. |
| |
| Alongside the ``tools`` directory is a ``build\native`` directory. This |
| contains a MSBuild properties file ``python.props`` that can be used in a |
| C++ project to reference the Python install. Including the settings will |
| automatically use the headers and import libraries in your build. |
| |
| The package information pages on nuget.org are |
| `www.nuget.org/packages/python <https://www.nuget.org/packages/python>`_ |
| for the 64-bit version, `www.nuget.org/packages/pythonx86 |
| <https://www.nuget.org/packages/pythonx86>`_ for the 32-bit version, and |
| `www.nuget.org/packages/pythonarm64 |
| <https://www.nuget.org/packages/pythonarm64>`_ for the ARM64 version |
| |
| Free-threaded packages |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.13 |
| |
| Packages containing free-threaded binaries are named |
| `python-freethreaded <https://www.nuget.org/packages/python-freethreaded>`_ |
| for the 64-bit version, `pythonx86-freethreaded |
| <https://www.nuget.org/packages/pythonx86-freethreaded>`_ for the 32-bit |
| version, and `pythonarm64-freethreaded |
| <https://www.nuget.org/packages/pythonarm64-freethreaded>`_ for the ARM64 |
| version. These packages contain both the ``python3.13t.exe`` and |
| ``python.exe`` entry points, both of which run free threaded. |
| |
| |
| Alternative bundles |
| =================== |
| |
| Besides the standard CPython distribution, there are modified packages including |
| additional functionality. The following is a list of popular versions and their |
| key features: |
| |
| `ActivePython <https://www.activestate.com/products/python/>`_ |
| Installer with multi-platform compatibility, documentation, PyWin32 |
| |
| `Anaconda <https://www.anaconda.com/download/>`_ |
| Popular scientific modules (such as numpy, scipy and pandas) and the |
| ``conda`` package manager. |
| |
| `Enthought Deployment Manager <https://assets.enthought.com/downloads/edm/>`_ |
| "The Next Generation Python Environment and Package Manager". |
| |
| Previously Enthought provided Canopy, but it `reached end of life in 2016 |
| <https://support.enthought.com/hc/en-us/articles/360038600051-Canopy-GUI-end-of-life-transition-to-the-Enthought-Deployment-Manager-EDM-and-Visual-Studio-Code>`_. |
| |
| `WinPython <https://winpython.github.io/>`_ |
| Windows-specific distribution with prebuilt scientific packages and |
| tools for building packages. |
| |
| Note that these packages may not include the latest versions of Python or |
| other libraries, and are not maintained or supported by the core Python team. |
| |
| |
| Supported Windows versions |
| ========================== |
| |
| As specified in :pep:`11`, a Python release only supports a Windows platform |
| while Microsoft considers the platform under extended support. This means that |
| Python |version| supports Windows 10 and newer. If you require Windows 7 |
| support, please install Python 3.8. If you require Windows 8.1 support, |
| please install Python 3.12. |
| |
| |
| .. _max-path: |
| |
| Removing the MAX_PATH limitation |
| ================================ |
| |
| Windows historically has limited path lengths to 260 characters. This meant that |
| paths longer than this would not resolve and errors would result. |
| |
| In the latest versions of Windows, this limitation can be expanded to over |
| 32,000 characters. Your administrator will need to activate the "Enable Win32 |
| long paths" group policy, or set ``LongPathsEnabled`` to ``1`` in the registry |
| key ``HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\FileSystem``. |
| |
| This allows the :func:`open` function, the :mod:`os` module and most other |
| path functionality to accept and return paths longer than 260 characters. |
| |
| After changing the above option and rebooting, no further configuration is |
| required. |
| |
| |
| .. _win-utf8-mode: |
| |
| UTF-8 mode |
| ========== |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.7 |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.15 |
| |
| Python UTF-8 mode is now enabled by default (:pep:`686`). |
| |
| Windows still uses legacy encodings for the system encoding (the ANSI Code |
| Page). Python uses it for the default encoding of text files (e.g. |
| :func:`locale.getencoding`). |
| |
| This may cause issues because UTF-8 is widely used on the internet |
| and most Unix systems, including WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux). |
| |
| The :ref:`Python UTF-8 Mode <utf8-mode>`, enabled by default, can help by |
| changing the default text encoding to UTF-8. |
| When the :ref:`UTF-8 mode <utf8-mode>` is enabled, you can still use the |
| system encoding (the ANSI Code Page) via the "mbcs" codec. |
| |
| You can disable the :ref:`Python UTF-8 Mode <utf8-mode>` via |
| the ``-X utf8=0`` command line option, or the ``PYTHONUTF8=0`` environment |
| variable. See :envvar:`PYTHONUTF8` for disabling UTF-8 mode, and |
| :ref:`setting-envvars` for how to modify environment variables. |
| |
| .. hint:: |
| Adding ``PYTHONUTF8={0,1}`` to the default environment variables |
| will affect all Python 3.7+ applications on your system. |
| If you have any Python 3.7+ applications which rely on the legacy |
| system encoding, it is recommended to set the environment variable |
| temporarily or use the ``-X utf8`` command line option. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| Even when UTF-8 mode is disabled, Python uses UTF-8 by default |
| on Windows for: |
| |
| * Console I/O including standard I/O (see :pep:`528` for details). |
| * The :term:`filesystem encoding <filesystem encoding and error handler>` |
| (see :pep:`529` for details). |
| |
| |
| .. _windows_finding_modules: |
| |
| Finding modules |
| =============== |
| |
| These notes supplement the description at :ref:`sys-path-init` with |
| detailed Windows notes. |
| |
| When no ``._pth`` file is found, this is how :data:`sys.path` is populated on |
| Windows: |
| |
| * An empty entry is added at the start, which corresponds to the current |
| directory. |
| |
| * If the environment variable :envvar:`PYTHONPATH` exists, as described in |
| :ref:`using-on-envvars`, its entries are added next. Note that on Windows, |
| paths in this variable must be separated by semicolons, to distinguish them |
| from the colon used in drive identifiers (``C:\`` etc.). |
| |
| * Additional "application paths" can be added in the registry as subkeys of |
| :samp:`\\SOFTWARE\\Python\\PythonCore\\{version}\\PythonPath` under both the |
| ``HKEY_CURRENT_USER`` and ``HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE`` hives. Subkeys which have |
| semicolon-delimited path strings as their default value will cause each path |
| to be added to :data:`sys.path`. (Note that all known installers only use |
| HKLM, so HKCU is typically empty.) |
| |
| * If the environment variable :envvar:`PYTHONHOME` is set, it is assumed as |
| "Python Home". Otherwise, the path of the main Python executable is used to |
| locate a "landmark file" (either ``Lib\os.py`` or ``pythonXY.zip``) to deduce |
| the "Python Home". If a Python home is found, the relevant sub-directories |
| added to :data:`sys.path` (``Lib``, ``plat-win``, etc) are based on that |
| folder. Otherwise, the core Python path is constructed from the PythonPath |
| stored in the registry. |
| |
| * If the Python Home cannot be located, no :envvar:`PYTHONPATH` is specified in |
| the environment, and no registry entries can be found, a default path with |
| relative entries is used (e.g. ``.\Lib;.\plat-win``, etc). |
| |
| If a ``pyvenv.cfg`` file is found alongside the main executable or in the |
| directory one level above the executable, the following variations apply: |
| |
| * If ``home`` is an absolute path and :envvar:`PYTHONHOME` is not set, this |
| path is used instead of the path to the main executable when deducing the |
| home location. |
| |
| The end result of all this is: |
| |
| * When running :file:`python.exe`, or any other .exe in the main Python |
| directory (either an installed version, or directly from the PCbuild |
| directory), the core path is deduced, and the core paths in the registry are |
| ignored. Other "application paths" in the registry are always read. |
| |
| * When Python is hosted in another .exe (different directory, embedded via COM, |
| etc), the "Python Home" will not be deduced, so the core path from the |
| registry is used. Other "application paths" in the registry are always read. |
| |
| * If Python can't find its home and there are no registry value (frozen .exe, |
| some very strange installation setup) you get a path with some default, but |
| relative, paths. |
| |
| For those who want to bundle Python into their application or distribution, the |
| following advice will prevent conflicts with other installations: |
| |
| * Include a ``._pth`` file alongside your executable containing the |
| directories to include. This will ignore paths listed in the registry and |
| environment variables, and also ignore :mod:`site` unless ``import site`` is |
| listed. |
| |
| * If you are loading :file:`python3.dll` or :file:`python37.dll` in your own |
| executable, explicitly set :c:member:`PyConfig.module_search_paths` before |
| :c:func:`Py_InitializeFromConfig`. |
| |
| * Clear and/or overwrite :envvar:`PYTHONPATH` and set :envvar:`PYTHONHOME` |
| before launching :file:`python.exe` from your application. |
| |
| * If you cannot use the previous suggestions (for example, you are a |
| distribution that allows people to run :file:`python.exe` directly), ensure |
| that the landmark file (:file:`Lib\\os.py`) exists in your install directory. |
| (Note that it will not be detected inside a ZIP file, but a correctly named |
| ZIP file will be detected instead.) |
| |
| These will ensure that the files in a system-wide installation will not take |
| precedence over the copy of the standard library bundled with your application. |
| Otherwise, your users may experience problems using your application. Note that |
| the first suggestion is the best, as the others may still be susceptible to |
| non-standard paths in the registry and user site-packages. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.6 |
| |
| Add ``._pth`` file support and removes ``applocal`` option from |
| ``pyvenv.cfg``. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.6 |
| |
| Add :file:`python{XX}.zip` as a potential landmark when directly adjacent |
| to the executable. |
| |
| .. deprecated:: 3.6 |
| |
| Modules specified in the registry under ``Modules`` (not ``PythonPath``) |
| may be imported by :class:`importlib.machinery.WindowsRegistryFinder`. |
| This finder is enabled on Windows in 3.6.0 and earlier, but may need to |
| be explicitly added to :data:`sys.meta_path` in the future. |
| |
| Additional modules |
| ================== |
| |
| Even though Python aims to be portable among all platforms, there are features |
| that are unique to Windows. A couple of modules, both in the standard library |
| and external, and snippets exist to use these features. |
| |
| The Windows-specific standard modules are documented in |
| :ref:`mswin-specific-services`. |
| |
| PyWin32 |
| ------- |
| |
| The :pypi:`PyWin32` module by Mark Hammond |
| is a collection of modules for advanced Windows-specific support. This includes |
| utilities for: |
| |
| * `Component Object Model |
| <https://learn.microsoft.com/windows/win32/com/component-object-model--com--portal>`_ |
| (COM) |
| * Win32 API calls |
| * Registry |
| * Event log |
| * `Microsoft Foundation Classes |
| <https://learn.microsoft.com/cpp/mfc/mfc-desktop-applications>`_ |
| (MFC) user interfaces |
| |
| `PythonWin <https://web.archive.org/web/20060524042422/ |
| https://www.python.org/windows/pythonwin/>`_ is a sample MFC application |
| shipped with PyWin32. It is an embeddable IDE with a built-in debugger. |
| |
| .. seealso:: |
| |
| `Win32 How Do I...? <https://timgolden.me.uk/python/win32_how_do_i.html>`_ |
| by Tim Golden |
| |
| `Python and COM <https://www.boddie.org.uk/python/COM.html>`_ |
| by David and Paul Boddie |
| |
| |
| cx_Freeze |
| --------- |
| |
| `cx_Freeze <https://cx-freeze.readthedocs.io/en/latest/>`_ |
| wraps Python scripts into executable Windows programs |
| (:file:`{*}.exe` files). When you have done this, you can distribute your |
| application without requiring your users to install Python. |
| |
| |
| Compiling Python on Windows |
| =========================== |
| |
| If you want to compile CPython yourself, first thing you should do is get the |
| `source <https://www.python.org/downloads/source/>`_. You can download either the |
| latest release's source or just grab a fresh `checkout |
| <https://devguide.python.org/setup/#get-the-source-code>`_. |
| |
| The source tree contains a build solution and project files for Microsoft |
| Visual Studio, which is the compiler used to build the official Python |
| releases. These files are in the :file:`PCbuild` directory. |
| |
| Check :file:`PCbuild/readme.txt` for general information on the build process. |
| |
| For extension modules, consult :ref:`building-on-windows`. |
| |
| |
| |
| .. _windows-full: |
| |
| The full installer (deprecated) |
| =============================== |
| |
| .. deprecated:: 3.14 |
| |
| This installer is deprecated since 3.14 and will not be produced for Python |
| 3.16 or later. See :ref:`pymanager` for the modern installer. |
| |
| |
| Installation steps |
| ------------------ |
| |
| Four Python |version| installers are available for download - two each for the |
| 32-bit and 64-bit versions of the interpreter. The *web installer* is a small |
| initial download, and it will automatically download the required components as |
| necessary. The *offline installer* includes the components necessary for a |
| default installation and only requires an internet connection for optional |
| features. See :ref:`install-layout-option` for other ways to avoid downloading |
| during installation. |
| |
| After starting the installer, one of two options may be selected: |
| |
| .. image:: win_installer.png |
| |
| If you select "Install Now": |
| |
| * You will *not* need to be an administrator (unless a system update for the |
| C Runtime Library is required or you install the :ref:`launcher` for all |
| users) |
| * Python will be installed into your user directory |
| * The :ref:`launcher` will be installed according to the option at the bottom |
| of the first page |
| * The standard library, test suite, launcher and pip will be installed |
| * If selected, the install directory will be added to your :envvar:`PATH` |
| * Shortcuts will only be visible for the current user |
| |
| Selecting "Customize installation" will allow you to select the features to |
| install, the installation location and other options or post-install actions. |
| To install debugging symbols or binaries, you will need to use this option. |
| |
| To perform an all-users installation, you should select "Customize |
| installation". In this case: |
| |
| * You may be required to provide administrative credentials or approval |
| * Python will be installed into the Program Files directory |
| * The :ref:`launcher` will be installed into the Windows directory |
| * Optional features may be selected during installation |
| * The standard library can be pre-compiled to bytecode |
| * If selected, the install directory will be added to the system :envvar:`PATH` |
| * Shortcuts are available for all users |
| |
| |
| Removing the MAX_PATH limitation |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| Windows historically has limited path lengths to 260 characters. This meant that |
| paths longer than this would not resolve and errors would result. |
| |
| In the latest versions of Windows, this limitation can be expanded to |
| approximately 32,000 characters. Your administrator will need to activate the |
| "Enable Win32 long paths" group policy, or set ``LongPathsEnabled`` to ``1`` |
| in the registry key |
| ``HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\FileSystem``. |
| |
| This allows the :func:`open` function, the :mod:`os` module and most other |
| path functionality to accept and return paths longer than 260 characters. |
| |
| After changing the above option, no further configuration is required. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.6 |
| |
| Support for long paths was enabled in Python. |
| |
| .. _install-quiet-option: |
| |
| Installing without UI |
| --------------------- |
| |
| All of the options available in the installer UI can also be specified from the |
| command line, allowing scripted installers to replicate an installation on many |
| machines without user interaction. These options may also be set without |
| suppressing the UI in order to change some of the defaults. |
| |
| The following options (found by executing the installer with ``/?``) can be |
| passed into the installer: |
| |
| +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | Name | Description | |
| +=====================+========================================================+ |
| | /passive | to display progress without requiring user interaction | |
| +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | /quiet | to install/uninstall without displaying any UI | |
| +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | /simple | to prevent user customization | |
| +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | /uninstall | to remove Python (without confirmation) | |
| +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | /layout [directory] | to pre-download all components | |
| +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | /log [filename] | to specify log files location | |
| +---------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| All other options are passed as ``name=value``, where the value is usually |
| ``0`` to disable a feature, ``1`` to enable a feature, or a path. The full list |
| of available options is shown below. |
| |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Name | Description | Default | |
| +===========================+======================================+==========================+ |
| | InstallAllUsers | Perform a system-wide installation. | 0 | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | TargetDir | The installation directory | Selected based on | |
| | | | InstallAllUsers | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | DefaultAllUsersTargetDir | The default installation directory | :file:`%ProgramFiles%\\\ | |
| | | for all-user installs | Python X.Y` or :file:`\ | |
| | | | %ProgramFiles(x86)%\\\ | |
| | | | Python X.Y` | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | DefaultJustForMeTargetDir | The default install directory for | :file:`%LocalAppData%\\\ | |
| | | just-for-me installs | Programs\\Python\\\ | |
| | | | PythonXY` or | |
| | | | :file:`%LocalAppData%\\\ | |
| | | | Programs\\Python\\\ | |
| | | | PythonXY-32` or | |
| | | | :file:`%LocalAppData%\\\ | |
| | | | Programs\\Python\\\ | |
| | | | PythonXY-64` | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | DefaultCustomTargetDir | The default custom install directory | (empty) | |
| | | displayed in the UI | | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | AssociateFiles | Create file associations if the | 1 | |
| | | launcher is also installed. | | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | CompileAll | Compile all ``.py`` files to | 0 | |
| | | ``.pyc``. | | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | PrependPath | Prepend install and Scripts | 0 | |
| | | directories to :envvar:`PATH` and | | |
| | | add ``.PY`` to :envvar:`PATHEXT` | | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | AppendPath | Append install and Scripts | 0 | |
| | | directories to :envvar:`PATH` and | | |
| | | add ``.PY`` to :envvar:`PATHEXT` | | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Shortcuts | Create shortcuts for the interpreter,| 1 | |
| | | documentation and IDLE if installed. | | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Include_doc | Install Python manual | 1 | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Include_debug | Install debug binaries | 0 | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Include_dev | Install developer headers and | 1 | |
| | | libraries. Omitting this may lead to | | |
| | | an unusable installation. | | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Include_exe | Install :file:`python.exe` and | 1 | |
| | | related files. Omitting this may | | |
| | | lead to an unusable installation. | | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Include_launcher | Install :ref:`launcher`. | 1 | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | InstallLauncherAllUsers | Installs the launcher for all | 1 | |
| | | users. Also requires | | |
| | | ``Include_launcher`` to be set to 1 | | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Include_lib | Install standard library and | 1 | |
| | | extension modules. Omitting this may | | |
| | | lead to an unusable installation. | | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Include_pip | Install bundled pip and setuptools | 1 | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Include_symbols | Install debugging symbols (``*.pdb``)| 0 | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Include_tcltk | Install Tcl/Tk support and IDLE | 1 | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Include_test | Install standard library test suite | 1 | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | Include_tools | Install utility scripts | 1 | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | LauncherOnly | Only installs the launcher. This | 0 | |
| | | will override most other options. | | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | SimpleInstall | Disable most install UI | 0 | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| | SimpleInstallDescription | A custom message to display when the | (empty) | |
| | | simplified install UI is used. | | |
| +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+--------------------------+ |
| |
| For example, to silently install a default, system-wide Python installation, |
| you could use the following command (from an elevated command prompt):: |
| |
| python-3.9.0.exe /quiet InstallAllUsers=1 PrependPath=1 Include_test=0 |
| |
| To allow users to easily install a personal copy of Python without the test |
| suite, you could provide a shortcut with the following command. This will |
| display a simplified initial page and disallow customization:: |
| |
| python-3.9.0.exe InstallAllUsers=0 Include_launcher=0 Include_test=0 |
| SimpleInstall=1 SimpleInstallDescription="Just for me, no test suite." |
| |
| (Note that omitting the launcher also omits file associations, and is only |
| recommended for per-user installs when there is also a system-wide installation |
| that included the launcher.) |
| |
| The options listed above can also be provided in a file named ``unattend.xml`` |
| alongside the executable. This file specifies a list of options and values. |
| When a value is provided as an attribute, it will be converted to a number if |
| possible. Values provided as element text are always left as strings. This |
| example file sets the same options as the previous example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: xml |
| |
| <Options> |
| <Option Name="InstallAllUsers" Value="no" /> |
| <Option Name="Include_launcher" Value="0" /> |
| <Option Name="Include_test" Value="no" /> |
| <Option Name="SimpleInstall" Value="yes" /> |
| <Option Name="SimpleInstallDescription">Just for me, no test suite</Option> |
| </Options> |
| |
| .. _install-layout-option: |
| |
| Installing without downloading |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| As some features of Python are not included in the initial installer download, |
| selecting those features may require an internet connection. To avoid this |
| need, all possible components may be downloaded on-demand to create a complete |
| *layout* that will no longer require an internet connection regardless of the |
| selected features. Note that this download may be bigger than required, but |
| where a large number of installations are going to be performed it is very |
| useful to have a locally cached copy. |
| |
| Execute the following command from Command Prompt to download all possible |
| required files. Remember to substitute ``python-3.9.0.exe`` for the actual |
| name of your installer, and to create layouts in their own directories to |
| avoid collisions between files with the same name. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| python-3.9.0.exe /layout [optional target directory] |
| |
| You may also specify the ``/quiet`` option to hide the progress display. |
| |
| Modifying an install |
| -------------------- |
| |
| Once Python has been installed, you can add or remove features through the |
| Programs and Features tool that is part of Windows. Select the Python entry and |
| choose "Uninstall/Change" to open the installer in maintenance mode. |
| |
| "Modify" allows you to add or remove features by modifying the checkboxes - |
| unchanged checkboxes will not install or remove anything. Some options cannot be |
| changed in this mode, such as the install directory; to modify these, you will |
| need to remove and then reinstall Python completely. |
| |
| "Repair" will verify all the files that should be installed using the current |
| settings and replace any that have been removed or modified. |
| |
| "Uninstall" will remove Python entirely, with the exception of the |
| :ref:`launcher`, which has its own entry in Programs and Features. |
| |
| |
| Installing free-threaded binaries |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.13 |
| |
| To install pre-built binaries with free-threading enabled (see :pep:`703`), you |
| should select "Customize installation". The second page of options includes the |
| "Download free-threaded binaries" checkbox. |
| |
| .. image:: win_install_freethreaded.png |
| |
| Selecting this option will download and install additional binaries to the same |
| location as the main Python install. The main executable is called |
| ``python3.13t.exe``, and other binaries either receive a ``t`` suffix or a full |
| ABI suffix. Python source files and bundled third-party dependencies are shared |
| with the main install. |
| |
| The free-threaded version is registered as a regular Python install with the |
| tag ``3.13t`` (with a ``-32`` or ``-arm64`` suffix as normal for those |
| platforms). This allows tools to discover it, and for the :ref:`launcher` to |
| support ``py.exe -3.13t``. Note that the launcher will interpret ``py.exe -3`` |
| (or a ``python3`` shebang) as "the latest 3.x install", which will prefer the |
| free-threaded binaries over the regular ones, while ``py.exe -3.13`` will not. |
| If you use the short style of option, you may prefer to not install the |
| free-threaded binaries at this time. |
| |
| To specify the install option at the command line, use |
| ``Include_freethreaded=1``. See :ref:`install-layout-option` for instructions on |
| pre-emptively downloading the additional binaries for offline install. The |
| options to include debug symbols and binaries also apply to the free-threaded |
| builds. |
| |
| Free-threaded binaries are also available :ref:`on nuget.org <windows-nuget>`. |
| |
| |
| Python launcher for Windows (deprecated) |
| ======================================== |
| |
| .. deprecated:: 3.14 |
| |
| The launcher and this documentation have been superseded by the Python |
| Install Manager described above. This is preserved temporarily for historical |
| interest. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.3 |
| |
| The Python launcher for Windows is a utility which aids in locating and |
| executing of different Python versions. It allows scripts (or the |
| command-line) to indicate a preference for a specific Python version, and |
| will locate and execute that version. |
| |
| Unlike the :envvar:`PATH` variable, the launcher will correctly select the most |
| appropriate version of Python. It will prefer per-user installations over |
| system-wide ones, and orders by language version rather than using the most |
| recently installed version. |
| |
| The launcher was originally specified in :pep:`397`. |
| |
| Getting started |
| --------------- |
| |
| From the command-line |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.6 |
| |
| System-wide installations of Python 3.3 and later will put the launcher on your |
| :envvar:`PATH`. The launcher is compatible with all available versions of |
| Python, so it does not matter which version is installed. To check that the |
| launcher is available, execute the following command in Command Prompt:: |
| |
| py |
| |
| You should find that the latest version of Python you have installed is |
| started - it can be exited as normal, and any additional command-line |
| arguments specified will be sent directly to Python. |
| |
| If you have multiple versions of Python installed (e.g., 3.7 and |version|) you |
| will have noticed that Python |version| was started - to launch Python 3.7, try |
| the command:: |
| |
| py -3.7 |
| |
| If you want the latest version of Python 2 you have installed, try the |
| command:: |
| |
| py -2 |
| |
| If you see the following error, you do not have the launcher installed:: |
| |
| 'py' is not recognized as an internal or external command, |
| operable program or batch file. |
| |
| The command:: |
| |
| py --list |
| |
| displays the currently installed version(s) of Python. |
| |
| The ``-x.y`` argument is the short form of the ``-V:Company/Tag`` argument, |
| which allows selecting a specific Python runtime, including those that may have |
| come from somewhere other than python.org. Any runtime registered by following |
| :pep:`514` will be discoverable. The ``--list`` command lists all available |
| runtimes using the ``-V:`` format. |
| |
| When using the ``-V:`` argument, specifying the Company will limit selection to |
| runtimes from that provider, while specifying only the Tag will select from all |
| providers. Note that omitting the slash implies a tag:: |
| |
| # Select any '3.*' tagged runtime |
| py -V:3 |
| |
| # Select any 'PythonCore' released runtime |
| py -V:PythonCore/ |
| |
| # Select PythonCore's latest Python 3 runtime |
| py -V:PythonCore/3 |
| |
| The short form of the argument (``-3``) only ever selects from core Python |
| releases, and not other distributions. However, the longer form (``-V:3``) will |
| select from any. |
| |
| The Company is matched on the full string, case-insensitive. The Tag is matched |
| on either the full string, or a prefix, provided the next character is a dot or a |
| hyphen. This allows ``-V:3.1`` to match ``3.1-32``, but not ``3.10``. Tags are |
| sorted using numerical ordering (``3.10`` is newer than ``3.1``), but are |
| compared using text (``-V:3.01`` does not match ``3.1``). |
| |
| |
| Virtual environments |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.5 |
| |
| If the launcher is run with no explicit Python version specification, and a |
| virtual environment (created with the standard library :mod:`venv` module or |
| the external ``virtualenv`` tool) active, the launcher will run the virtual |
| environment's interpreter rather than the global one. To run the global |
| interpreter, either deactivate the virtual environment, or explicitly specify |
| the global Python version. |
| |
| From a script |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Let's create a test Python script - create a file called ``hello.py`` with the |
| following contents |
| |
| .. code-block:: python |
| |
| #! python |
| import sys |
| sys.stdout.write("hello from Python %s\n" % (sys.version,)) |
| |
| From the directory in which hello.py lives, execute the command:: |
| |
| py hello.py |
| |
| You should notice the version number of your latest Python 2.x installation |
| is printed. Now try changing the first line to be: |
| |
| .. code-block:: python |
| |
| #! python3 |
| |
| Re-executing the command should now print the latest Python 3.x information. |
| As with the above command-line examples, you can specify a more explicit |
| version qualifier. Assuming you have Python 3.7 installed, try changing |
| the first line to ``#! python3.7`` and you should find the 3.7 |
| version information printed. |
| |
| Note that unlike interactive use, a bare "python" will use the latest |
| version of Python 2.x that you have installed. This is for backward |
| compatibility and for compatibility with Unix, where the command ``python`` |
| typically refers to Python 2. |
| |
| From file associations |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The launcher should have been associated with Python files (i.e. ``.py``, |
| ``.pyw``, ``.pyc`` files) when it was installed. This means that |
| when you double-click on one of these files from Windows explorer the launcher |
| will be used, and therefore you can use the same facilities described above to |
| have the script specify the version which should be used. |
| |
| The key benefit of this is that a single launcher can support multiple Python |
| versions at the same time depending on the contents of the first line. |
| |
| Shebang lines |
| ------------- |
| |
| If the first line of a script file starts with ``#!``, it is known as a |
| "shebang" line. Linux and other Unix like operating systems have native |
| support for such lines and they are commonly used on such systems to indicate |
| how a script should be executed. This launcher allows the same facilities to |
| be used with Python scripts on Windows and the examples above demonstrate their |
| use. |
| |
| To allow shebang lines in Python scripts to be portable between Unix and |
| Windows, this launcher supports a number of 'virtual' commands to specify |
| which interpreter to use. The supported virtual commands are: |
| |
| * ``/usr/bin/env`` |
| * ``/usr/bin/python`` |
| * ``/usr/local/bin/python`` |
| * ``python`` |
| |
| For example, if the first line of your script starts with |
| |
| .. code-block:: sh |
| |
| #! /usr/bin/python |
| |
| The default Python or an active virtual environment will be located and used. |
| As many Python scripts written to work on Unix will already have this line, |
| you should find these scripts can be used by the launcher without modification. |
| If you are writing a new script on Windows which you hope will be useful on |
| Unix, you should use one of the shebang lines starting with ``/usr``. |
| |
| Any of the above virtual commands can be suffixed with an explicit version |
| (either just the major version, or the major and minor version). |
| Furthermore the 32-bit version can be requested by adding "-32" after the |
| minor version. I.e. ``/usr/bin/python3.7-32`` will request usage of the |
| 32-bit Python 3.7. If a virtual environment is active, the version will be |
| ignored and the environment will be used. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.7 |
| |
| Beginning with python launcher 3.7 it is possible to request 64-bit version |
| by the "-64" suffix. Furthermore it is possible to specify a major and |
| architecture without minor (i.e. ``/usr/bin/python3-64``). |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.11 |
| |
| The "-64" suffix is deprecated, and now implies "any architecture that is |
| not provably i386/32-bit". To request a specific environment, use the new |
| :samp:`-V:{TAG}` argument with the complete tag. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.13 |
| |
| Virtual commands referencing ``python`` now prefer an active virtual |
| environment rather than searching :envvar:`PATH`. This handles cases where |
| the shebang specifies ``/usr/bin/env python3`` but :file:`python3.exe` is |
| not present in the active environment. |
| |
| The ``/usr/bin/env`` form of shebang line has one further special property. |
| Before looking for installed Python interpreters, this form will search the |
| executable :envvar:`PATH` for a Python executable matching the name provided |
| as the first argument. This corresponds to the behaviour of the Unix ``env`` |
| program, which performs a :envvar:`PATH` search. |
| If an executable matching the first argument after the ``env`` command cannot |
| be found, but the argument starts with ``python``, it will be handled as |
| described for the other virtual commands. |
| The environment variable :envvar:`!PYLAUNCHER_NO_SEARCH_PATH` may be set |
| (to any value) to skip this search of :envvar:`PATH`. |
| |
| Shebang lines that do not match any of these patterns are looked up in the |
| ``[commands]`` section of the launcher's :ref:`.INI file <launcher-ini>`. |
| This may be used to handle certain commands in a way that makes sense for your |
| system. The name of the command must be a single argument (no spaces in the |
| shebang executable), and the value substituted is the full path to the |
| executable (additional arguments specified in the .INI will be quoted as part |
| of the filename). |
| |
| .. code-block:: ini |
| |
| [commands] |
| /bin/xpython=C:\Program Files\XPython\python.exe |
| |
| Any commands not found in the .INI file are treated as **Windows** executable |
| paths that are absolute or relative to the directory containing the script file. |
| This is a convenience for Windows-only scripts, such as those generated by an |
| installer, since the behavior is not compatible with Unix-style shells. |
| These paths may be quoted, and may include multiple arguments, after which the |
| path to the script and any additional arguments will be appended. |
| |
| |
| Arguments in shebang lines |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| The shebang lines can also specify additional options to be passed to the |
| Python interpreter. For example, if you have a shebang line: |
| |
| .. code-block:: sh |
| |
| #! /usr/bin/python -v |
| |
| Then Python will be started with the ``-v`` option |
| |
| Customization |
| ------------- |
| |
| .. _launcher-ini: |
| |
| Customization via INI files |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Two .ini files will be searched by the launcher - ``py.ini`` in the current |
| user's application data directory (``%LOCALAPPDATA%`` or ``$env:LocalAppData``) |
| and ``py.ini`` in the same directory as the launcher. The same .ini files are |
| used for both the 'console' version of the launcher (i.e. py.exe) and for the |
| 'windows' version (i.e. pyw.exe). |
| |
| Customization specified in the "application directory" will have precedence over |
| the one next to the executable, so a user, who may not have write access to the |
| .ini file next to the launcher, can override commands in that global .ini file. |
| |
| Customizing default Python versions |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| In some cases, a version qualifier can be included in a command to dictate |
| which version of Python will be used by the command. A version qualifier |
| starts with a major version number and can optionally be followed by a period |
| ('.') and a minor version specifier. Furthermore it is possible to specify |
| if a 32 or 64 bit implementation shall be requested by adding "-32" or "-64". |
| |
| For example, a shebang line of ``#!python`` has no version qualifier, while |
| ``#!python3`` has a version qualifier which specifies only a major version. |
| |
| If no version qualifiers are found in a command, the environment |
| variable :envvar:`!PY_PYTHON` can be set to specify the default version |
| qualifier. If it is not set, the default is "3". The variable can |
| specify any value that may be passed on the command line, such as "3", |
| "3.7", "3.7-32" or "3.7-64". (Note that the "-64" option is only |
| available with the launcher included with Python 3.7 or newer.) |
| |
| If no minor version qualifiers are found, the environment variable |
| ``PY_PYTHON{major}`` (where ``{major}`` is the current major version qualifier |
| as determined above) can be set to specify the full version. If no such option |
| is found, the launcher will enumerate the installed Python versions and use |
| the latest minor release found for the major version, which is likely, |
| although not guaranteed, to be the most recently installed version in that |
| family. |
| |
| On 64-bit Windows with both 32-bit and 64-bit implementations of the same |
| (major.minor) Python version installed, the 64-bit version will always be |
| preferred. This will be true for both 32-bit and 64-bit implementations of the |
| launcher - a 32-bit launcher will prefer to execute a 64-bit Python installation |
| of the specified version if available. This is so the behavior of the launcher |
| can be predicted knowing only what versions are installed on the PC and |
| without regard to the order in which they were installed (i.e., without knowing |
| whether a 32 or 64-bit version of Python and corresponding launcher was |
| installed last). As noted above, an optional "-32" or "-64" suffix can be |
| used on a version specifier to change this behaviour. |
| |
| Examples: |
| |
| * If no relevant options are set, the commands ``python`` and |
| ``python2`` will use the latest Python 2.x version installed and |
| the command ``python3`` will use the latest Python 3.x installed. |
| |
| * The command ``python3.7`` will not consult any |
| options at all as the versions are fully specified. |
| |
| * If ``PY_PYTHON=3``, the commands ``python`` and ``python3`` will both use |
| the latest installed Python 3 version. |
| |
| * If ``PY_PYTHON=3.7-32``, the command ``python`` will use the 32-bit |
| implementation of 3.7 whereas the command ``python3`` will use the latest |
| installed Python (PY_PYTHON was not considered at all as a major |
| version was specified.) |
| |
| * If ``PY_PYTHON=3`` and ``PY_PYTHON3=3.7``, the commands |
| ``python`` and ``python3`` will both use specifically 3.7 |
| |
| In addition to environment variables, the same settings can be configured |
| in the .INI file used by the launcher. The section in the INI file is |
| called ``[defaults]`` and the key name will be the same as the |
| environment variables without the leading ``PY_`` prefix (and note that |
| the key names in the INI file are case insensitive.) The contents of |
| an environment variable will override things specified in the INI file. |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| * Setting ``PY_PYTHON=3.7`` is equivalent to the INI file containing: |
| |
| .. code-block:: ini |
| |
| [defaults] |
| python=3.7 |
| |
| * Setting ``PY_PYTHON=3`` and ``PY_PYTHON3=3.7`` is equivalent to the INI file |
| containing: |
| |
| .. code-block:: ini |
| |
| [defaults] |
| python=3 |
| python3=3.7 |
| |
| Diagnostics |
| ----------- |
| |
| If an environment variable :envvar:`!PYLAUNCHER_DEBUG` is set (to any value), the |
| launcher will print diagnostic information to stderr (i.e. to the console). |
| While this information manages to be simultaneously verbose *and* terse, it |
| should allow you to see what versions of Python were located, why a |
| particular version was chosen and the exact command-line used to execute the |
| target Python. It is primarily intended for testing and debugging. |
| |
| Dry run |
| ------- |
| |
| If an environment variable :envvar:`!PYLAUNCHER_DRYRUN` is set (to any value), |
| the launcher will output the command it would have run, but will not actually |
| launch Python. This may be useful for tools that want to use the launcher to |
| detect and then launch Python directly. Note that the command written to |
| standard output is always encoded using UTF-8, and may not render correctly in |
| the console. |
| |
| Install on demand |
| ----------------- |
| |
| If an environment variable :envvar:`!PYLAUNCHER_ALLOW_INSTALL` is set (to any |
| value), and the requested Python version is not installed but is available on |
| the Microsoft Store, the launcher will attempt to install it. This may require |
| user interaction to complete, and you may need to run the command again. |
| |
| An additional :envvar:`!PYLAUNCHER_ALWAYS_INSTALL` variable causes the launcher |
| to always try to install Python, even if it is detected. This is mainly intended |
| for testing (and should be used with :envvar:`!PYLAUNCHER_DRYRUN`). |
| |
| Return codes |
| ------------ |
| |
| The following exit codes may be returned by the Python launcher. Unfortunately, |
| there is no way to distinguish these from the exit code of Python itself. |
| |
| The names of codes are as used in the sources, and are only for reference. There |
| is no way to access or resolve them apart from reading this page. Entries are |
| listed in alphabetical order of names. |
| |
| +-------------------+-------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | Name | Value | Description | |
| +===================+=======+===============================================+ |
| | RC_BAD_VENV_CFG | 107 | A :file:`pyvenv.cfg` was found but is corrupt.| |
| +-------------------+-------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | RC_CREATE_PROCESS | 101 | Failed to launch Python. | |
| +-------------------+-------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | RC_INSTALLING | 111 | An install was started, but the command will | |
| | | | need to be re-run after it completes. | |
| +-------------------+-------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | RC_INTERNAL_ERROR | 109 | Unexpected error. Please report a bug. | |
| +-------------------+-------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | RC_NO_COMMANDLINE | 108 | Unable to obtain command line from the | |
| | | | operating system. | |
| +-------------------+-------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | RC_NO_PYTHON | 103 | Unable to locate the requested version. | |
| +-------------------+-------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| | RC_NO_VENV_CFG | 106 | A :file:`pyvenv.cfg` was required but not | |
| | | | found. | |
| +-------------------+-------+-----------------------------------------------+ |
| |