This tutorial shows how you can use fbs to create a simple Python GUI and an associated installer:
You can follow this tutorial on Windows, Mac or Linux. You need Python 3.5 or later.
Create a virtual environment in the current directory:
python3 -m venv venv
Activate the virtual environment:
# On Mac/Linux:
source venv/bin/activate
# On Windows:
call venv\scripts\activate.bat
The remainder of the tutorial assumes that the virtual environment is active.
Install the required libraries (most notably, fbs
):
pip install fbs-tutorial
(If this produces errors, try pip install wheel
first.)
We are using PyQt in this tutorial. In other fbs projects, you can use PySide just as well.
Execute the following command to start a new fbs project:
fbs startproject
The command creates a new folder called src/
in your current directory.
This folder contains the minimum configuration for a bare-bones Python/Qt app.
To run our little application from source, execute the following command:
fbs run
This shows an (admittedly not very exciting) window. Screenshots on Windows/Mac/Ubuntu:
Let us now take a look at the source code that was generated by fbs. It is at
src/main/python/main.py
:
from fbs_runtime.application_context.PyQt5 import ApplicationContext
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QMainWindow
import sys
if __name__ == '__main__':
appctxt = ApplicationContext() # 1. Instantiate ApplicationContext
window = QMainWindow()
window.resize(250, 150)
window.show()
exit_code = appctxt.app.exec() # 2. Invoke appctxt.app.exec()
sys.exit(exit_code)
The important steps are highlighted as comments. They're the only boilerplate that's required. In the middle of the code, you can see that a window is being created, resized and then shown.
We want to turn the source code of our app into a standalone executable that can be run on your users' computers. In the context of Python applications, this process is called "freezing".
Use the following command to turn the app's source code into a standalone executable:
fbs freeze
This creates the folder target/YourApp
. You can copy this directory to any
other computer (with the same OS as yours) and run the app there! Isn't that
awesome?
Desktop applications are normally distributed by means of an installer.
On Windows, this would be an executable called YourAppSetup.exe
.
On Mac, mountable disk images such as YourApp.dmg
are commonly used.
On Linux, .deb
files are common on Ubuntu, .rpm
on Fedora / CentOS, and
.pkg.tar.xz
on Arch.
fbs lets you generate each of the above packages via the command:
fbs installer
Depending on your operating system, this may require you to first install some tools. Please read on for OS-specific instructions.
Before you can use the installer
command on Windows, please install
NSIS and add its installation directory
to your PATH
environment variable.
The installer is created at target/YourAppSetup.exe
. It lets your users pick
the installation directory and adds your app to the Start Menu. It also creates
an entry in Windows' list of installed programs. Your users can use this to
uninstall your app. The following screenshots show these steps in action:
On Mac, the installer
command generates the file target/YourApp.dmg
. When
your users open it, they see the following volume:
To install your app, your users simply drag its icon to the Applications folder (also shown in the volume).
On Linux, the installer
command requires that you have
fpm. You can for instance follow
these instructions to
install it.
Depending on your Linux distribution, fbs creates the installer at
target/YourApp.deb
, ...pkg.tar.xz
or ...rpm
. Your users can use these
files to install your app with their respective package manager.
We will now create a more powerful example. Here's what it looks like on Windows:
When you click on the button in the window, a new quote is fetched from the internet and displayed above.
Before you can run this example, you need to install the Python requests library. To do this, type in the following command:
pip install requests
The source code of the new app consists of two files:
Please copy the former over the existing file in src/main/python/
, and the
latter into the new directory src/main/resources/base/
.
Once you have followed these steps, you can do fbs run
(or fbs freeze
etc.)
as before.
The new app uses the following code to fetch quotes from the internet:
def _get_quote():
return requests.get('https://build-system.fman.io/quote').text
You can see that it uses the requests
library we just installed above. Feel
free to open
build-system.fman.io/quote in the
browser to get a feel for what it returns. Its data comes from a
public database.
The app follows the same basic steps as before. It instantiates an application
context and ends by calling appctxt.app.exec_()
:
appctxt = ApplicationContext()
...
exit_code = appctxt.app.exec_()
sys.exit(exit_code)
What's different is what happens in between:
stylesheet = appctxt.get_resource('styles.qss')
appctxt.app.setStyleSheet(open(stylesheet).read())
window = MainWindow()
window.show()
The first line uses
get_resource(...)
to
obtain the path to styles.qss
. This is a QSS file, Qt's
equivalent to CSS. The next line reads its contents and sets them as the
stylesheet of the application context's .app
.
fbs ensures that get_resource(...)
works both when running from source (i.e.
during fbs run
) and when running the compiled form of your app. In the former
case, the returned path is in src/main/resources
. In the latter, it will be in
your app's installation directory. fbs handles the corresponding details
transparently.
The next-to-last line instantiates MainWindow
. This new class sets up the text
field for the quote and the button. When the button is clicked, it changes the
contents of the text field using _get_quote()
above. You can find the
full code in main.py
.
As already mentioned, you can use fbs run
to run the new app. But here's
what's really cool: You can also do fbs freeze
and fbs installer
to
distribute it to other computers. fbs includes the requests
dependency and the
styles.qss
file automatically.
fbs lets you use Python and Qt to create desktop applications for Windows, Mac and Linux. It can create installers for your app, and automatically handles the packaging of third-party libraries and data files. These things normally take weeks to figure out. fbs gives them to you in minutes instead.
fbs's Manual explains the technical foundation of the steps in this tutorial. Read it to find out more about fbs's required directory structure, dependency management, handling of data files, custom build commands, API and more.
If you have not used PyQt before: It's the library that allowed us in the above examples to use Qt (a GUI framework) from Python. fbs's contribution is not to combine Python and Qt. It's to make it very easy to package and deploy Python and Qt-based apps to your users' computers. For an introduction to PyQt, see here.
Feel free to share the link to this tutorial!