Utility to let you have a single source of version in your code base.
This utility targets modern Python projects which have layout generated by Poetry, with a pyproject.toml file in place of setup.py. With this layout, the project initially has two places to maintain version string: one in pyproject.toml file and one in some *.py file (normally __init__.py):
# pyproject.toml
[tool.poetry]
name = "your-package"
version = "0.1.0"
# your_package/__init__.py
__version__ = "0.1.0"
This duplicity often leads to inconsistency when you, the author, forget to update both.
single-version is born to solve that headache circumstance. By convention, it chooses the pyproject.toml file as original source of version string. Your project's __version__
variable then is computed from it. When your package is already deployed and installed to some system, the version string will be retrieved from that Python environment (the pyproject.toml is not included in distribution file).
Years ago, to retrieve version for an installed package, ones often used pkg_resources, which has well-known issue of causing slow import. Learning from that mistake, single-version use importlib.metadata
, which becomes standard from Python 3.8, instead.
Add single_version
as your project dependency:
poetry add single-version
Assume that your package source tree is like this:
. ├── awesome_name │ └── __init__.py ├── pyproject.toml ├── README.rst └── tests/
where the __version__
variable is defined in awesome_name/__init__.py file. The file content can be like this:
from pathlib import Path
from single_version import get_version
__version__ = get_version('awesome_name', Path(__file__).parent.parent)
def get_version (package_name: str, looked_path: Path) -> str
package_name
: Your package's name (same as in pyproject.toml file).looked_path
(ofpathlib.Path
type): Folder where your project's pyproject.toml resides.