uv/docs/guides/install-python.md
John Mumm f66ce58a09
Simplify managed Python flags (#12246)
Currently, for users to specify at the command line whether to use
uv-managed or system Python interpreters, they use the
`--python-preference` parameter, which takes four possible values. This
is more complex than necessary since the normal case is to either say
"only managed" or "not managed". This PR hides the old
`--python-preference` parameter from help and documentation and adds two
new flags: `--managed-python` and `--no-managed-python` to capture the
"only managed" and "not managed" cases.

I have successfully tested this locally but currently cannot add
snapshot tests because of problems with distinguishing managed vs.
system interpreters in CI (and non-determinism when run on different
developers' machines). The `--python-preference` test in
`tool-install.rs` is currently ignored for this reason. See #5144 and
#7473.

---------

Co-authored-by: Zanie Blue <contact@zanie.dev>
2025-03-18 18:13:14 +01:00

4.3 KiB

title description
Installing and managing Python A guide to using uv to install Python, including requesting specific versions, automatic installation, viewing installed versions, and more.

Installing Python

If Python is already installed on your system, uv will detect and use it without configuration. However, uv can also install and manage Python versions. uv automatically installs missing Python versions as needed — you don't need to install Python to get started.

Getting started

To install the latest Python version:

$ uv python install

!!! note

Python does not publish official distributable binaries. As such, uv uses distributions from the Astral [`python-build-standalone`](https://github.com/astral-sh/python-build-standalone) project. See the [Python distributions](../concepts/python-versions.md#managed-python-distributions) documentation for more details.

Once Python is installed, it will be used by uv commands automatically.

!!! important

When Python is installed by uv, it will not be available globally (i.e. via the `python` command).
Support for this feature is in _preview_. See [Installing Python executables](../concepts/python-versions.md#installing-python-executables)
for details.

You can still use
[`uv run`](../guides/scripts.md#using-different-python-versions) or
[create and activate a virtual environment](../pip/environments.md) to use `python` directly.

Installing a specific version

To install a specific Python version:

$ uv python install 3.12

To install multiple Python versions:

$ uv python install 3.11 3.12

To install an alternative Python implementation, e.g., PyPy:

$ uv python install pypy@3.10

See the python install documentation for more details.

Reinstalling Python

To reinstall uv-managed Python versions, use --reinstall, e.g.:

$ uv python install --reinstall

This will reinstall all previously installed Python versions. Improvements are constantly being added to the Python distributions, so reinstalling may resolve bugs even if the Python version does not change.

Viewing Python installations

To view available and installed Python versions:

$ uv python list

See the python list documentation for more details.

Automatic Python downloads

Python does not need to be explicitly installed to use uv. By default, uv will automatically download Python versions when they are required. For example, the following would download Python 3.12 if it was not installed:

$ uvx python@3.12 -c "print('hello world')"

Even if a specific Python version is not requested, uv will download the latest version on demand. For example, if there are no Python versions on your system, the following will install Python before creating a new virtual environment:

$ uv venv

!!! tip

Automatic Python downloads can be [easily disabled](../concepts/python-versions.md#disabling-automatic-python-downloads) if you want more control over when Python is downloaded.

Using existing Python versions

uv will use existing Python installations if present on your system. There is no configuration necessary for this behavior: uv will use the system Python if it satisfies the requirements of the command invocation. See the Python discovery documentation for details.

To force uv to use the system Python, provide the --no-managed-python flag. See the Python version preference documentation for more details.

Next steps

To learn more about uv python, see the Python version concept page and the command reference.

Or, read on to learn how to run scripts and invoke Python with uv.