Metadata-Version: 2.1 Name: flit Version: 3.8.0 Summary: A simple packaging tool for simple packages. Author-email: Thomas Kluyver Requires-Python: >=3.6 Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules Requires-Dist: flit_core >=3.8.0 Requires-Dist: requests Requires-Dist: docutils Requires-Dist: tomli-w Requires-Dist: sphinx ; extra == "doc" Requires-Dist: sphinxcontrib_github_alt ; extra == "doc" Requires-Dist: pygments-github-lexers ; extra == "doc" Requires-Dist: testpath ; extra == "test" Requires-Dist: responses ; extra == "test" Requires-Dist: pytest>=2.7.3 ; extra == "test" Requires-Dist: pytest-cov ; extra == "test" Requires-Dist: tomli ; extra == "test" Project-URL: Changelog, https://flit.pypa.io/en/stable/history.html Project-URL: Documentation, https://flit.pypa.io Project-URL: Source, https://github.com/pypa/flit Provides-Extra: doc Provides-Extra: test **Flit** is a simple way to put Python packages and modules on PyPI. It tries to require less thought about packaging and help you avoid common mistakes. See `Why use Flit? `_ for more about how it compares to other Python packaging tools. Install ------- :: $ python3 -m pip install flit Flit requires Python 3 and therefore needs to be installed using the Python 3 version of pip. Python 2 modules can be distributed using Flit, but need to be importable on Python 3 without errors. Usage ----- Say you're writing a module ``foobar`` — either as a single file ``foobar.py``, or as a directory — and you want to distribute it. 1. Make sure that foobar's docstring starts with a one-line summary of what the module is, and that it has a ``__version__``: .. code-block:: python """An amazing sample package!""" __version__ = "0.1" 2. Install flit if you don't already have it:: python3 -m pip install flit 3. Run ``flit init`` in the directory containing the module to create a ``pyproject.toml`` file. It will look something like this: .. code-block:: ini [build-system] requires = ["flit_core >=3.2,<4"] build-backend = "flit_core.buildapi" [project] name = "foobar" authors = [{name = "Sir Robin", email = "robin@camelot.uk"}] dynamic = ["version", "description"] [project.urls] Home = "https://github.com/sirrobin/foobar" You can edit this file to add other metadata, for example to set up command line scripts. See the `pyproject.toml page `_ of the documentation. If you have already got a ``flit.ini`` file to use with older versions of Flit, convert it to ``pyproject.toml`` by running ``python3 -m flit.tomlify``. 4. Run this command to upload your code to PyPI:: flit publish Once your package is published, people can install it using *pip* just like any other package. In most cases, pip will download a 'wheel' package, a standard format it knows how to install. If you specifically ask pip to install an 'sdist' package, it will install and use Flit in a temporary environment. To install a package locally for development, run:: flit install [--symlink] [--python path/to/python] Flit packages a single importable module or package at a time, using the import name as the name on PyPI. All subpackages and data files within a package are included automatically.