I created a server and client file and I was about to convert it to exe when I realized that I also need to convert the module it uses to exe. What do I do about the module?
It looks like Auto PY to EXE uses PyInstaller to do the real work here:
A .py to .exe converter using a simple graphical interface and PyInstaller in Python.
PyInstaller will automatically bundle any dependencies it finds:
What other modules and libraries does your script need in order to run? (These are sometimes called its "dependencies".)
To find out, PyInstaller finds all the import statements in your script. It finds the imported modules and looks in them for import statements, and so on recursively, until it has a complete list of modules your script may use.
So as long as you import your dependencies somewhere reachable from your main script and your virtual environment is active, you should get the right behaviour automatically.
Note that you'll probably need to build two executables: one for your server and a separate one for your client.
I have a question if I use Pyinstaller to convert python file to exe will convert the modules with or not? , because i have python file with a lot of modules and i want to convert it how i can do it and avoiding this issue,
Thank u.
import requests
error:
ImportError: No module named requests
.
After discussion in comments basically the error is occurring when you try to open the generated file in another computer, however your aren't using any virtual environment so you can install the requirements and try to rebuild again but rather you want a stanalone exe file.
For that use :
pyinstaller --onefile your-script.py
# or pyinstaller -F your-script.py
## this should generate a stand alone executable file located in the dist folder.
About your concerns on how pyinstaller works
Does pyinstaller make copies of modules when building ?
The answer is simply : yes , as mentioned in the docs here PyInstaller reads a Python script written by you. It analyzes your code to discover every other module and library your script needs in order to execute. Then it collects copies of all those files – including the active Python interpreter! – and puts them with your script in a single folder, or optionally in a single executable file.
However, the variations of Python and third-party libraries are endless and unpredictable, if something goes wrong you can learn how to fix those issues by reading this page on the docs here
What to generate ?
you can read more here
Create a one-folder bundle containing an executable (default), -D, --onedir
Create a one-file bundled executable. you need to use -F ore --onefile
Finally
I highly encourage you to use separate virtual environment for each project.
I don't mean to compile code and interpreter as an exe as it is 99% questions there. I mean to build a static single python.exe to be able to execute any script by giving it as argument any *.py file.
I mean the same situation as it is with nodeJS when you download only single executable.
Or if it is not possible to single exe, maybe to just a few files instead of huge default package such as is with for example Sublime text where all python engine is in python33.dll and python3.3.zip all about 5mb, but there is no python exe to run code externally that is not as a plugin.
On Windows you need three files. You question lists two of them. The third is python.exe. On Windows the interpreter must be built separately from the actual executable so that C modules can access the functions within the interpreter.
The DLL must be built from the Python source so that all the C modules that come with Python can be built into it instead of being contained in the .pyd files that come with Python. The zip file is composed of all the Python modules in the standard library; see the zipimport documentation for more information about the import process.
I've made my first Python program, using Python 3.2. Now I'm trying to figure out how to make it an executable.
I pretty much only need it for Windows only. I've searched as much as possible and found out that py2exe doesn't support Python 3. cxfreeze does, but I can't figure out how to make a single executable of my program with it. I need it as a portable one-file exe.
Please bear with me as I am a total newcomer :) Any help is appreciated.
You can use cxfreeze to make the executable (and other files it creates), compress them into a *.7z archive using 7-zip, then use 7-ZIP SFX Maker to turn it into a self extracting archive.
When creating the SFX archive, configure it so that the main executable cxfreeze generates runs when the files are extracted. You can also change the archives icon, as well as tell the archive to extract and run from a temporary folder.
When the user runs the exe, the files will extract to the temporary folder and the program will run. To the user, it will behave exactly like a normal exe file.
According to the Python docs, the only program that will package Python3 as an .exe in cx_freeze, and the cx_freeze developer has explicitly stated that he will not support single-file executables (due to the 'dirty hacks' needed, which some anti-malware programs flag as malware).
Comment on the feature request to add Python3 support to py2exe.
You can compare py2exe folder structure with new python3, and make similar. Then you could use SFX idea to store these folders like libraries, python script and interpreter and set script for SFX to just launch your application. As I remember, this is possible in WinRar, and as I think now, in other archivers.
How can I compile and run a python file (*.py extension)?
python yourfile.py
You have to have python installed first. It will automatically compile your file into a .pyc binary, and then run it for you. It will automatically recompile any time your file changes.
http://www.python.org/download/
Python compiles its files to bytecode before executing them. That means you have to have a Python interpreter installed on the target machine.
If you don't want to install Python on the target machine use py2exe, py2app or something similar.
If you just want to compile sources, without running them, you can do this
compileall.py <directory>
this command will compile python code in that directory recursively
compileall script is usually located in directory like
/usr/local/lib/python2.6
i.e. <prefix>/lib/python2.6 (or similar, depending on prefixes set a python configuration)
As Lulu suggests, you should make sure that resulting .pyc and .pyo files are executable by the users you care about.
compileall can also be used as a module
import compileall
compileall.compile_dir(path)
Python is an interpreted language, so you don't need to compile it; just to run it. As it happens, the standard version of python will compile this to "bytecode", just like Java etc. does, and will save that (in .pyc files) and run it next time around, saving time, if you haven't updated the file since. If you've updated the file, it will be recompiled automatically.
You can also run python with a -O flag, which will generate .pyo files instead of .pyc. I'm not sure it makes much difference. If speed is important, use psyco.
And yes, on Unix (including Linux, BSD, and Mac OS X, or in a unix shell on windows) you can use a shebang line at the top of the file to make the file automatically run using python. On windows, the equivalent is to associate .py files with python.exe, and then make sure your PATHEXT environment variable includes ".PY" extensions.
However, for windows, you more likely want to write a gui program in python (possibly using PyQT4 and ERIC4) which has a .pyw file as its main script, and has .pyw associated with pythonw (which comes with python on windows). This will let you run python scripts on windows just like other GUI programs. For publishing and distribution, you probably want to compile to an executable file using something like py2exe, as others mentioned.
To add to Paul McMillan's answer, if you are on Windows and you have Python installed, then any files ending with the extension ".py" should be associated with the python executable, allowing you to run it like so:
> myfile.py
In *nix, you can begin the file with #!/usr/bin/python and run it like so:
$ ./myfile.py
In *nix systems, if the first two characters of a file are #! then it will execute the file with the specified executable, which I set here to be /usr/bin/python.
If you want to transform a python source file into a double-clickable .exe on windows, you can use py2exe, which can help you build an easy to distribute package.
On most Unix-like systems, you can use the shebang to tell the operating system which interpreter should be called. You simply put
#!/path/to/python
in the first line of your file, where of course you have to replace "/path/to/" with the path you have on your system. In most cases this would be "/usr/bin/python" or "/usr/local/bin/python". On unix systems you could also look for the path with
"#!usr/bin/env python"
or invoke the command
which python
to find the path.
You can then run your program with the command
./yourprogram.py
If it tells you that you do not have permission to do so, you have to use the command
chmod a+x yourprogram.py
Answer for Windows
first you must install python
then set path variable
after that write your python program and save
think there is a python program that name "hello.py"
open cmd.exe
then goto the path that you saved your "hello.py" file,
and then type python hello.py and press enter key.
now the python code is automatically compile and show the result.