(loading-custom-python-code)= # Loading custom Python code Pyodide provides a simple API {any}`pyodide.runPython` to run Python code. However, when your Python code grow bigger, putting hundreds of lines inside `runPython` is not scalable. For larger projects, the best way to run Python code with Pyodide is: 1. create a Python package 1. load your Python package into the Pyodide (Emscripten) virtual file system 1. import the package with `let mypkg = pyodide.pyimport("mypkgname")` 1. call into your package with `mypkg.some_api(some_args)`. ## Using wheels The best way of serving custom Python code is making it a package in the wheel (.whl) format. If the package is built as a `wheel` file, you can use {any}`micropip.install` to install the package. See {ref}`loading_packages` for more information. ```{admonition} Packages with C extensions :class: warning If your Python code contains C extensions, it needs to be built in a specialized way (See {ref}`new-packages`). ``` ## Loading then importing Python code It is also possible to download and import Python code from an external source. We recommend that you serve all files in an archive, instead of individually downloading each Python script. ### From Python ```pyodide // Downloading an archive await pyodide.runPythonAsync(` from pyodide.http import pyfetch response = await pyfetch("https://.../your_package.tar.gz") # .zip, .whl, ... await response.unpack_archive() # by default, unpacks to the current dir `) pkg = pyodide.pyimport("your_package"); pkg.do_something(); ``` ```pyodide // Downloading a single file await pyodide.runPythonAsync(` from pyodide.http import pyfetch response = await pyfetch("https://.../script.py") with open("script.py", "wb") as f: f.write(await response.bytes()) `) pkg = pyodide.pyimport("script"); pkg.do_something(); ``` ```{admonition} What is pyfetch? :class: info Pyodide provides {any}`pyodide.http.pyfetch`, which is a convenient wrapper of JavaScript `fetch`. See {ref}`load-external-files-in-pyodide` for more information. ``` ### From JavaScript ```js let response = await fetch("https://.../your_package.tar.gz"); // .zip, .whl, ... let buffer = await response.arraybuffer(); await pyodide.unpackArchive(buffer); // by default, unpacks to the current dir pyodide.pyimport("your_package"); ``` ```{admonition} Warning on unpacking a wheel package :class: warning Since a wheel package is actually a zip archive, you can use {any}`pyodide.unpackArchive()` to unpack a wheel package, instead of using {any}`micropip.install`. However, {mod}`micropip` does dependency resolution when installing packages, while {any}`pyodide.unpackArchive()` simply unpacks the archive. So you must be aware of that each dependencies of a package need to be installed manually before unpacking a wheel. > _Future plans:_ we are planning to support a method for a static dependency resolution (See: [pyodide#2045](https://github.com/pyodide/pyodide/issues/2045)). ``` ## Running external code directly If you want to run a single Python script from an external source in a simplest way, you can: ```js pyodide.runPython(await (await fetch("https://some_url/.../code.py")).text()); ```