Guide for using uv, the Python package and project manager. Use this when
uv uv is an extremely fast Python package and project manager. It replaces pip, pip-tools, pipx, pyenv, virtualenv, poetry, etc. When to use uv Always use uv for Python work, especially if you see: The uv.lock file uv headers in requirements* files, e.g., "This file was autogenerated by uv" Don't use uv in projects managed by other tools: Poetry projects (identifiable by poetry.lock file) PDM projects (identifiable by pdm.lock file) Choosing the right workflow Scripts Use when: Running single Python files and standalone scripts. Key commands: uv run script.py # Run a script uv run --with requests script.py # Run with additional packages uv add --script script.py requests # Add dependencies inline to the script Projects Use when: There is a pyproject.toml or uv.lock Key commands: uv init # Create new project uv add requests # Add dependency uv remove requests # Remove dependency uv sync # Install from lockfile uv run <command> # Run commands in environment uv run python -c "" # Run Python in project environment uv run -p 3.12 <command> # Run with specific Python version Tools Use when: Running command-line tools (e.g., ruff, ty, pytest) without installation. Key commands: uvx <tool> <args> # Run a tool without installation uvx <tool>@<version> <args> # Run a specific version of a tool Important: uvx runs tools from PyPI by package name. This can be unsafe - only run well-known tools. Only use uv tool install only when specifically requested by the user. Pip interface Use when: Legacy workflows with requirements.txt or manual environment management, no uv.lock present. Key commands: uv venv uv pip install -r requirements.txt uv pip compile requirements.in -o requirements.txt uv pip sync requirements.txt # Platform independent resolution uv pip compile --universal requirements.in -o requirements.txt Important: Don't use the pip interface unless clearly needed. Don't introduce new requirements.txt files. Prefer uv init for new projects. Migrating from other tools pyenv → uv python pyenv install 3.12 → uv python install 3.12 pyenv versions → uv python list --only-installed pyenv local 3.12 → uv python pin 3.12 pyenv global 3.12 → uv python install 3.12 --default pipx → uvx pipx run ruff → uvx ruff pipx install ruff → uv tool install ruff pipx upgrade ruff → uv tool upgrade ruff pipx list → uv tool list pip and pip-tools → uv pip pip install package → uv pip install package pip install -r req.txt → uv pip install -r req.txt pip freeze → uv pip freeze pip-compile req.in → uv pip compile req.in pip-sync req.txt → uv pip sync req.txt virtualenv .venv → uv venv Common patterns Don't use pip in uv projects # Bad pip install requests # Good uv add requests Don't run python directly # Bad python script.py # Good uv run script.py # Bad python -c "..." # Good uv run python -c "..." # Bad python3.12 -c "..." # Good uvx python@3.12 -c "..." Don't manually manage environments in uv projects # Bad python -m venv .venv source .venv/bin/activate # Good uv run <command> Documentation For detailed information, read the official documentation: https://docs.astral.sh/uv/llms.txt The documentation links to specific pages for each of these workflows.
don't have the plugin yet? install it then click "run inline in claude" again.