PyScript is a framework that allows users to create rich Python applications in the browser using HTML's interface and the power of Pyodide, MicroPython and WASM, and modern web technologies.
To get started see the Beginning PyScript tutorial.
For examples see here.
Other useful resources:
- The official technical docs.
- Our current Home Page on the web.
- A free-to-use online editor for trying PyScript.
- Our community Discord Channel, to keep in touch .
Every Tuesday at 15:30 UTC there is the PyScript Community Call on zoom, where we can talk about PyScript development in the open. Most of the maintainers regularly participate in the call, and everybody is welcome to join.
Every other Thursday at 16:00 UTC there is the PyScript FUN call: this is a call in which everybody is encouraged to show what they did with PyScript.
For more details on how to join the calls and up to date schedule, consult the official calendar:
- Google calendar in UTC time;
- iCal format.
PyScript is a meta project that aims to combine multiple open technologies into a framework that allows users to create sophisticated browser applications with Python. It integrates seamlessly with the way the DOM works in the browser and allows users to add Python logic in a way that feels natural both to web and Python developers.
To try PyScript, import the appropriate pyscript files into the <head>
tag of your html page:
<head>
<link
rel="stylesheet"
href="https://pyscript.net/releases/2024.6.2/core.css"
/>
<script
type="module"
src="https://pyscript.net/releases/2024.6.2/core.js"
></script>
</head>
<body>
<script type="py" terminal>
from pyscript import display
display("Hello World!") # this goes to the DOM
print("Hello terminal") # this goes to the terminal
</script>
</body>
You can then use PyScript components in your html page. PyScript currently offers various ways of running Python code:
<script type="py">
: can be used to define python code that is executable within the web page.<script type="py" src="hello.py">
: same as above, but the python source is fetched from the given URL.<script type="py" terminal>
: same as above, but also creates a terminal where to display stdout and stderr (e.g., the output ofprint()
);input()
does not work.<script type="py" terminal worker>
: run Python inside a web worker: the terminal is fully functional andinput()
works.<py-script>
: same as<script type="py">
, but it is not recommended because if the code contains HTML tags, they could be parsed wrongly.<script type="mpy">
: same as above but use MicroPython instead of Python.
Check out the official docs for more detailed documentation.
Read the contributing guide to learn about our development process, reporting bugs and improvements, creating issues and asking questions.
Check out the developing process documentation for more information on how to setup your development environment.
The PyScript organization governance is documented in a separate repository.
To cut a new release of PyScript simply add a new release while remembering to write a comprehensive changelog. A GitHub action will kick in and ensure the release is described and deployed to a URL with the pattern: https://pyscript.net/releases/YYYY.M.v/ (year/month/version - as per our CalVer versioning scheme).
Then, the following three separate repositories need updating:
- Documentation - Change the
version.json
file in the root of the directory and thennode version-update.js
. - Homepage - Ensure the version
referenced in
index.html
is the latest version. - PSDC - Use discord or Anaconda Slack (if you work at Anaconda) to let the PSDC team know there's a new version, so they can update their project templates.