Managing Python distributions¶
The python
command group provides a set of commands to manage Python distributions that may be used by other tools.
Note
When using environments, manual management is not necessary since by default Hatch will automatically download and manage Python distributions internally when a requested version cannot be found.
Location¶
There are two ways to control where Python distributions are installed. Both methods make it so that each installed distribution is placed in a subdirectory of the configured location named after the distribution.
- The globally configured default directory for Python installations.
- The
-d
/--dir
option of everypython
subcommand, which takes precedence over the default directory.
Installation¶
To install a Python distribution, use the python install
command. For example:
hatch python install 3.12
This will:
- Download the
3.12
Python distribution - Unpack it into a directory named
3.12
within the configured default directory for Python installations - Add the installation to the user PATH
Now its python
executable can be used by you or other tools.
Note
For PATH changes to take effect in the current shell, you will need to restart it.
Multiple¶
You can install multiple Python distributions at once by providing multiple distribution names. For example:
hatch python install 3.12 3.11 pypy3.10
If you would like to install all available Python distributions that are compatible with your system, use all
as the distribution name:
hatch python install all
Private¶
By default, installing Python distributions will add them to the user PATH. To disable this behavior, use the --private
flag like so:
hatch python install 3.12 --private
This when combined with the directory option can be used to create private, isolated installations.
Listing distributions¶
You can see all of the available and installed Python distributions by using the python show
command. For example, if you already installed the 3.12
distribution you may see something like this:
$ hatch python show
Installed
┏━━━━━━┳━━━━━━━━━┓
┃ Name ┃ Version ┃
┡━━━━━━╇━━━━━━━━━┩
│ 3.12 │ 3.12.3 │
└──────┴─────────┘
Available
┏━━━━━━━━━━┳━━━━━━━━━┓
┃ Name ┃ Version ┃
┡━━━━━━━━━━╇━━━━━━━━━┩
│ 3.7 │ 3.7.9 │
├──────────┼─────────┤
│ 3.8 │ 3.8.19 │
├──────────┼─────────┤
│ 3.9 │ 3.9.19 │
├──────────┼─────────┤
│ 3.10 │ 3.10.14 │
├──────────┼─────────┤
│ 3.11 │ 3.11.9 │
├──────────┼─────────┤
│ pypy2.7 │ 7.3.15 │
├──────────┼─────────┤
│ pypy3.9 │ 7.3.15 │
├──────────┼─────────┤
│ pypy3.10 │ 7.3.15 │
└──────────┴─────────┘
Finding installations¶
The Python executable of an installed distribution can be found by using the python find
command. For example:
$ hatch python find 3.12
/home/.local/share/hatch/pythons/3.12/python/bin/python3
You can instead output its parent directory by using the -p
/--parent
flag:
$ hatch python find 3.12 --parent
/home/.local/share/hatch/pythons/3.12/python/bin
This is useful when other tools do not need to use the executable directly but require knowing the directory containing it.
Updates¶
To update installed Python distributions, use the python update
command. For example:
hatch python update 3.12 3.11 pypy3.10
When there are no updates available for a distribution, a warning will be displayed:
$ hatch python update 3.12
The latest version is already installed: 3.12.3
Removal¶
To remove installed Python distributions, use the python remove
command. For example:
hatch python remove 3.12 3.11 pypy3.10