Copyright © 2009–2021 The Spyder Development Team
QtPy is a small abstraction layer that lets you write applications using a single API call to either PyQt or PySide.
It provides support for PyQt5, PyQt6, PySide6, PySide2 using the Qt5 layout (where the QtGui module has been split into QtGui and QtWidgets).
Basically, you can write your code as if you were using PyQt or PySide directly,
but import Qt modules from qtpy
instead of PyQt5
, PyQt6
, PySide2
, or PySide6
.
Accordingly, when porting code between different Qt bindings (PyQt vs PySide) or Qt versions (Qt5 vs Qt6), QtPy makes this much more painless, and allows you to easily and incrementally transition between them. QtPy handles incompatibilities and differences between bindings or Qt versions for you while keeping your project running, so you can focus more on your own code and less on keeping track of supporting every Qt version and binding. Furthermore, when you do want to upgrade or support new bindings, it allows you to update your project module by module rather than all at once. You can check out examples of this approach in projects using QtPy, like git-cola.
This project is based on the pyqode.qt project and the spyderlib.qt module from the Spyder project, and also includes contributions adapted from qt-helpers, developed as part of the glue project.
Unlike pyqode.qt
this is not a namespace package, so it is not tied
to a particular project or namespace.
This project is released under the MIT license.
You need PyQt5, PyQt6, PySide2 or PySide6 installed in your system to make use
of QtPy. If several of these packages are found, PyQt5 is used by
default unless you set the QT_API
environment variable.
QT_API
can take the following values:
pyqt5
(to use PyQt5).pyqt6
(to use PyQt6).pyside6
(to use PySide6)pyside2
(to use PySide2)
pip install qtpy
or
conda install qtpy
A Command Line Interface (CLI) is offered to help with usage of QtPy. Presently, its only feature is to generate command line arguments for Mypy that will enable it to process the QtPy source files with the same API as QtPy itself would have selected.
If you run
qtpy mypy-args
QtPy will output a string of Mypy CLI args that will reflect the currently selected Qt API. For example, in an environment where PyQt5 is installed and selected (or the default fallback, if no binding can be found in the environment), this would output the following:
--always-true=PYQT5 --always-false=PYQT6 --always-false=PYSIDE2 --always-false=PYSIDE6
Using Bash or a similar shell, this can be injected into the Mypy command line invocation as follows:
mypy --package mypackage $(qtpy mypy-args)
Everyone is welcome to contribute!
QtPy is funded thanks to the generous support of
and the donations we have received from our users around the world through Open Collective: