A library and CLI app for rendering project templates.
- Works with local paths and git URLs.
- Your project can include any file and
Copier
can dynamically replace values in any kind of text file. - It generates a beautiful output and takes care of not overwrite existing files unless instructed to do so.
- Install Python 3.7 or newer (3.8 or newer if you're on Windows).
- Install Git 2.27 or newer.
- To use as a CLI app:
pipx install copier
- To use as a library:
pip install copier
To create a template:
📁 my_copier_template ------------------------ # your template project
├── 📄 copier.yml ---------------------------- # your template configuration
├── 📁 .git ---------------------------------- # your template is a git repository
├── 📁 {{project_name}} ---------------------- # a folder with a templated name
│ └── 📄 {{module_name}}.py.jinja ---------- # a file with a templated name
└── 📄 {{_copier_conf.answers_file}}.jinja --- # answers are recorded here
# questions
project_name:
type: str
help: What is your project name?
module_name:
type: str
help: What is your Python module name?
print("Hello from {{module_name}}!")
# Changes here will be overwritten by Copier
{{_copier_answers|to_nice_yaml}}
To generate a project from the template:
-
On the command-line:
copier path/to/project/template path/to/destination
-
Or in Python code, programmatically:
from copier import run_auto # Create a project from a local path run_auto("path/to/project/template", "path/to/destination") # Or from a git URL. run_auto("https://github.com/copier-org/copier.git", "path/to/destination") # You can also use "gh:" as a shortcut of "https://github.com/" run_auto("gh:copier-org/copier.git", "path/to/destination") # Or "gl:" as a shortcut of "https://gitlab.com/" run_auto("gl:copier-org/copier.git", "path/to/destination")
Copier is composed of these main concepts:
- Templates. They lay out how to generate the subproject.
- Questionaries. They are configured in the template. Answers are used to generate projects.
- Projects. This is where your real program lives. But it is usually generated and/or updated from a template.
Copier targets these main human audiences:
-
Template creators. Programmers that repeat code too much and prefer a tool to do it for them.
!!! tip
Copier doesn't replace the DRY principle... but sometimes you simply can't be DRY and you need a DRYing machine...
-
Template consumers. Programmers that want to start a new project quickly, or that want to evolve it comfortably.
Non-humans should be happy also by using copier's CLI or API, as long as their expectations are the same as for those humans... and as long as they have feelings.
Templates have these goals:
- Code scaffolding. Help consumers have a working source code tree as quick as possible. All templates allow scaffolding.
- Code lifecycle management. When the template evolves, let consumers update their projects. Not all templates allow updating.
Copier tries to have a smooth learning curve that lets you create simple templates that can evolve into complex ones as needed.
You can browse public copier templates in GitHub using
the copier-template
topic. Use them as
inspiration!
If you want your template to appear in that list, just add the topic to it! 🏷
Special thanks go to jpscaletti for originally creating
Copier
. This project would not be a thing without him.
Many thanks to pykong who took over maintainership on the project, promoted it, and laid out the bases of what the project is today.
Big thanks also go to Yajo for his relentless zest for
improving Copier
even further.
Thanks a lot, pawamoy for polishing very important rough edges and improving the documentation and UX a lot.