Basically sick of dealing with mixed formatting here. Going with the
number at
7c08e61b73/.editorconfig (L20)
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Using tools
Many Python packages provide applications that can be used as tools. uv has specialized support for easily invoking and installing tools.
Using uvx
The uvx command invokes a tool without installing it.
For example, to run ruff:
$ uvx ruff
!!! note
This is exactly equivalent to:
```console
$ uv tool run ruff
```
`uvx` is provided as a short alias since the operation is very common.
Arguments can be provided after the tool name:
$ uvx pycowsay hello from uv
-------------
< hello from uv >
-------------
\ ^__^
\ (oo)\_______
(__)\ )\/\
||----w |
|| ||
Commands with different package names
When you invoke uvx ruff, uv installs the ruff package which provides the ruff command.
However, sometimes the package and command names differ.
The --from option can be used to invoke a command from a specific package, e.g. http which is
provided by httpie:
$ uvx --from httpie http
Requesting specific versions
To run a tool at a specific version, use command@<version>:
$ uvx ruff@0.3.0 check
The --from option can also be used to specify package versions, as above:
$ uvx --from 'ruff==0.3.0' ruff check
Or, to constrain to a range of versions:
$ uvx --from 'ruff>0.2.0,<0.3.0' ruff check
Note the @ syntax cannot be used for anything other than an exact version.
Requesting different sources
The --from option can also be used to install from alternative sources.
To pull from git:
$ uvx --from git+https://github.com/httpie/cli httpie
Commands with plugins
Additional dependencies can be included, e.g., to include mkdocs-material when running mkdocs:
$ uvx --with mkdocs-material mkdocs --help
Installing tools
If a tool is used often, it can be useful to install it to a persistent environment and add it to
the PATH instead of invoking uvx repeatedly.
To install ruff:
$ uv tool install ruff
When a tool is installed, its executables are placed in a bin directory in the PATH which allows
the tool to be run without uv. If it's not on the PATH, a warning will be displayed and uv tool update-shell can be used to add it to the PATH.
After installing ruff, it should be available:
$ ruff --version
Unlike uv pip install, installing a tool does not make its modules available in the current
environment. For example, the following command will fail:
$ python -c "import ruff"
This isolation is important for reducing interactions and conflicts between dependencies of tools, scripts, and projects.
Unlike uvx, uv tool install operates on a package and will install all executables provided by
the tool.
For example, the following will install the http, https, and httpie executables:
$ uv tool install httpie
Additionally, package versions can be included without --from:
$ uv tool install 'httpie>0.1.0'
And, similarly, for package sources:
$ uv tool install git+https://github.com/httpie/cli
As with uvx, installations can include additional packages:
$ uv tool install mkdocs --with mkdocs-material
Next steps
See the tools concept documentation for more details on how tools are managed.