Sorry Python but it is what it is.

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1 point

If you want to export your local environment, isn’t usually a requirements.txt used?

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6 points

Isn’t it called a requirements.txt because it’s used to export your project requirements (dependencies), not all packages installed in your local pip environment?

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5 points

Yes, but this file is created by you and not pip. It’s not like package.json from npm. You don’t even need to create this file.

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3 points

Well if the file would be created by hand, that’s very cumbersome.

But what is sometimes done to create it automatically is using

pip freeze > requirements. txt

inside your virtual environment.

You said I don’t need to create this file? How else will I distribute my environment so that it can be easily used? There are a lot of other standard, like setup.py etc, so it’s only one possibility. But the fact that there are multiple competing standard shows that how pip handles this is kinds bad.

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2 points

If you try to keep your depencies low, it’s not very cumbersome. I usually do that.

A setup.py/pyproject.toml can replace requirements. txt, but it is for creating packages and does way more than just installing dependencies, so they are not really competing.

For scripts which have just 1 or 2 packges as depencies it’s also usuall to just tell people to run pip install .

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2 points

I work with python professionally and would never do that. I add my actual imports to the requirements and if I forget I do it later as the package fails CI/CD tests.

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