Getting Started on Windows ========================== The Qt library has to be built with the same version of MSVC as Python and PySide2, this can be selected when using the online installer. Requirements ------------ * Qt package from `here`_ or a custom build of Qt (preferably Qt 5.12 or greater) * A Python interpreter (version Python 3.5+). Preferably get it from the `official website`_. * `MSVC2017`_ (or MSVC2019) for Python 3 on Windows, * `CMake`_ version 3.1 or greater * `Git`_ version 2 or greater * `libclang`_ prebuilt version from the ``Qt Downloads`` page is recommended. * `OpenSSL`_ (optional for SSL support, Qt must have been configured using the same SSL library). * ``virtualenv`` is strongly recommended, but optional. * ``sphinx`` package for the documentation (optional). .. note:: Python 2.7 interpreter is not supported. The official Python 2.7 binary package offerred on the `official website`_ is built using MSVC 2007, while the Qt libraries are built using MSVC 2015/2017. If you intend to use Python 2.7, build the interpreter yourself with MSVC 2015 or later, and build Qt for Python with it. .. _here: https://qt.io/download .. _official website: https://www.python.org/downloads/ .. _MSVC2017: https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/thank-you-downloading-visual-studio/?sku=BuildTools .. _CMake: https://cmake.org/download/ .. _Git: https://git-scm.com/download/win .. _libclang: http://download.qt.io/development_releases/prebuilt/libclang/ .. _OpenSSL: https://sourceforge.net/projects/openssl/ Building from source on Windows 10 ---------------------------------- Creating a virtual environment ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ``virtualenv`` allows you to create a local, user-writeable copy of a python environment into which arbitrary modules can be installed and which can be removed after use:: virtualenv testenv call testenv\scripts\activate pip install sphinx # optional: documentation pip install numpy PyOpenGL # optional: for examples will create and use a new virtual environment, which is indicated by the command prompt changing. Setting up CLANG ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you don't have libclang already in your system, you can download from the Qt servers, e.g. ``libclang-release_60-windows-vs2015_64-clazy.7z``. Extract the files, and leave it on any desired path, e.g ``c:\``, and then set these two required environment variables:: set LLVM_INSTALL_DIR=c:\libclang set PATH=C:\libclang\bin;%PATH% Getting PySide2 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Cloning the official repository can be done by:: git clone --recursive https://code.qt.io/pyside/pyside-setup Checking out the version that we want to build, e.g. 5.14:: cd pyside-setup && git checkout 5.14 .. note:: Keep in mind you need to use the same version as your Qt installation Building PySide2 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Check your Qt installation path, to specifically use that version of qmake to build PySide2. e.g. ``E:\Qt\5.12.0\msvc2015_64\bin\qmake.exe``. Build can take a few minutes, so it is recommended to use more than one CPU core:: python setup.py build --qmake=c:\path\to\qmake.exe --openssl=c:\path\to\openssl\bin --build-tests --ignore-git --parallel=8 Installing PySide2 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To install on the current directory, just run:: python setup.py install --qmake=c:\path\to\qmake.exe --openssl=c:\path\to\openssl\bin --build-tests --ignore-git --parallel=8 Test installation ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You can execute one of the examples to verify the process is properly working. Remember to properly set the environment variables for Qt and PySide2:: python examples/widgets/widgets/tetrix.py