Frequently Asked Questions ========================== **When did The Qt Company adopt PySide2?** In April 2016 `The Qt Company `_ decided to properly support the port. For more information, see ``_. **Why use PySide2 and not PySide?** Since PySide was developed for Qt 4, we now use PySide2 to imply that it is for a newer version, after it was ported to support Qt 5. **Where I can find information about the old PySide project?** The project's old wiki page is available on PySide, but the project is now deprecated and not supported. **There are three wheels (pyside2, shiboken2, and shiboken2_generator), what's the difference?** Before the official release, everything was in one big wheel, so it made sense to split these into separate wheels, each for the major projects currently in development: * **pyside2**: contains all the PySide2 modules to use the Qt framework; also depends on the shiboken2 module. * **shiboken2**: contains the shiboken2 module with helper functions for PySide2. * **shiboken2_generator**: contains the generator binary that can work with a C++ project and a typesystem to generate Python bindings. If you want to generate bindings for a Qt/C++ project, there won't be any linking to the Qt shared libraries; you need to do this by hand. We recommend building PySide2 from scratch to have everything properly linked. **Why is the shiboken2_generator not installed automatically?** It's not necessary to install the shiboken2_generator to use PySide2. The package is a result of the wheel splitting process. To use the generator, it's recommended to build it from scratch to have the proper Qt linking.