.. _quickstart-guide: Quick-start guide ================= You can use ``future`` to help to port your code from Python 2 to Python 3 today -- and still have it run on Python 2. If you already have Python 3 code, you can instead use ``future`` to offer Python 2 compatibility with almost no extra work. Installation ------------ To install the latest stable version, type:: pip install future If you would prefer the latest development version, it is available `here `_. If you are writing code from scratch ------------------------------------ The easiest way is to start each new module with these lines:: from __future__ import (absolute_import, division, print_function, unicode_literals) from builtins import * Then write standard Python 3 code. The :mod:`future` package will provide support for running your code on Python 2.7, and 3.4+ mostly unchanged. - For explicit import forms, see :ref:`explicit-imports`. - For more details, see :ref:`what-else`. - For a cheat sheet, see :ref:`compatible-idioms`. To convert existing Python 3 code --------------------------------- To offer backward compatibility with Python 2 from your Python 3 code, you can use the ``pasteurize`` script. This adds these lines at the top of each module:: from __future__ import absolute_import from __future__ import division from __future__ import print_function from __future__ import unicode_literals from builtins import open from builtins import str # etc., as needed from future import standard_library standard_library.install_aliases() and converts several Python 3-only constructs (like keyword-only arguments) to a form compatible with both Py3 and Py2. Most remaining Python 3 code should simply work on Python 2. See :ref:`backwards-conversion` for more details. To convert existing Python 2 code --------------------------------- .. include:: futurize_overview.rst See :ref:`forwards-conversion-stage1` and :ref:`forwards-conversion-stage2` for more details. .. If you already know Python 3, start with the :ref:`automatic-conversion` page. .. If you don't know Python 3 yet, start with :ref:`python3-essentials`. .. _standard-library: Standard library reorganization ------------------------------- :mod:`future` supports the standard library reorganization (PEP 3108) via one of several mechanisms, allowing most moved standard library modules to be accessed under their Python 3 names and locations in Python 2:: from future import standard_library standard_library.install_aliases() # Then these Py3-style imports work on both Python 2 and Python 3: import socketserver import queue from collections import UserDict, UserList, UserString from collections import ChainMap # even on Py2.7 from itertools import filterfalse, zip_longest import html import html.entities import html.parser import http import http.client import http.server import http.cookies import http.cookiejar import urllib.request import urllib.parse import urllib.response import urllib.error import urllib.robotparser import xmlrpc.client import xmlrpc.server and others. For a complete list, see :ref:`direct-imports`. .. _py2-dependencies: Python 2-only dependencies -------------------------- If you have dependencies that support only Python 2, you may be able to use the ``past`` module to automatically translate these Python 2 modules to Python 3 upon import. First, install the Python 2-only package into your Python 3 environment:: $ pip3 install mypackagename --no-compile # to ignore SyntaxErrors (or use ``pip`` if this points to your Py3 environment.) Then add the following code at the top of your (Py3 or Py2/3-compatible) code:: from past.translation import autotranslate autotranslate(['mypackagename']) import mypackagename This feature is experimental, and we would appreciate your feedback on how well this works or doesn't work for you. Please file an issue `here `_ or post to the `python-porting `_ mailing list. For more information on the automatic translation feature, see :ref:`translation`. Next steps ---------- For more information about writing Py2/3-compatible code, see: - :ref:`compatible-idioms` - :ref:`what-else`.