The following code is the module I used in my pyqt widget, but after I use pyinstaller to build exe file, the file size is 233MB large.
How can I reduce the file size?
I tried to create a new virtual environment, but there is no improvement, and I also tried to add excludes=['mkl','whl'] in my pyinstaller spec file, but no improve as well.
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QMainWindow, QMessageBox, QApplication, QFileDialog
from PyQt5.QtGui import QIcon, QPixmap
from PyQt5.QtCore import Qt, pyqtSignal, QEvent
import sys
from glob import glob
from numpy import array as nparray
from PIL.Image import open as imopen
from win32gui import GetWindowText, GetForegroundWindow
from MainWindow import Ui_MainWindow, resource_path
from qimage2ndarray import array2qimage
from shutil import move
from os import makedirs, chdir, getcwd
from os import path as ospath
MainWindow is the UI code I build with qtdesigner, the module it use is :
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QWidget, QLabel, QPushButton, QStatusBar
from PyQt5.QtCore import QRect, Qt, QSize, QMetaObject, QCoreApplication
from PyQt5.QtGui import QFont, QIcon, QPixmap
import sys
from os.path import join, abspath
For my app I was able to reduce size from 80mb to 15mb
Here is what I did :-
First Use pyinstaller in one directory mode
The created folder has a lot of garbage and unrequired stuff so first delete the DLL files which you know you have not used in application.
Then for rest of files use hit-and-trial method, delete one file and see if app is still working properly, if not then restore that file and try with some other file.
After you are done, use UPX (in lzma mode) on all .pyd files.
Most of DLLs can also be compressed with UPX except some (like VCRUNTIME.dll), so you will have to do hit and trail for DLL files too.
Finally you can compress any images (if any) on your app.
Done (◠‿◕)
Finally I reduce my exe file size from 233MB to 64MB by solution provided here :
Create a new conda environment pyinstaller-env
install numpy with conda install conda-forge::numpy "blas=*=openblas"
Switch environment to pyinstaller-env and package my QT application.
Related
I created a GUI with python and now I want to create an exe file, which can be used on every computer which has not python installed.Im using macOS ...
Is this possible?
The following modules I used:
import sys
from PyQt5 import QtWidgets
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QApplication, QMainWindow, QFileDialog, QMessageBox
from PyQt5.QtGui import QIntValidator
import pandas
import folium
import numpy as np
import networkx
I am writing an app that needs to work both in Windows and in Linux. I have been developing it in Linux and am just now working on the details to make it work on both platforms. The issue I am running into is with regards to importing other python files from another directory. The app, which runs without issue in Linux (Ubuntu 18.04), has the following folder structure:
- data
- images
- lib
---- configTools.py
---- dbTools.py
---- osciloscopeTools.py
---- peakFindingTools.py
---- poissonTools.py
---- plottingTools.py
---- spacingTools.py
- src
---- config.py
---- interface.py
The program begins with running interface.py. The beginning of the code that I have at the moment is written as follows:
import pandas as pd
import os
import sys
sys.path.append('../lib')
#sys.path.append(os.path.realpath('../lib'))
import platform
import subprocess as subprocess
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import QMainWindow, QApplication, QPushButton, QWidget, QAction, QTabWidget, QVBoxLayout, QFileDialog, QLabel, QCheckBox, QLineEdit, QGridLayout
from PyQt5.QtGui import QIcon, QPixmap
#from PyQt5.QtCore import pyqtSlot
from PyQt5.QtCore import *
from PyQt5.QtGui import *
from PyQt5 import QtCore, QtWidgets
import matplotlib
import time
import sqlite3
matplotlib.use('Qt5Agg')
from matplotlib.backends.backend_qt5agg import FigureCanvasQTAgg, NavigationToolbar2QT as NavigationToolbar
from matplotlib.figure import Figure
#import os
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import math
import numpy as np
import imageio
import csv
# Import local files
import configTools as ct
import dbTools as dbt
import oscilloscopeTools as ot
import peakFindingTools as pft
import poissonTools as pt
import config
import plottingTools as pltools
The issue when running in Windows (Visual Studio 2019) is the block at the bottom where I attempt to import my other python files. An exception is thrown saying "No module named 'configTools'". All of the files in that block are similarly underlined in the IDE, saying "unresolved import ___" where ___ is the filename of each. My best guess is that the line executing "sys.path.append('../lib')" is not accomplishing the desired effects in Windows. Permanently altering environment variables is not a good option for me since this app needs to be portable once it's done. It works fine in Linux, so I am under the impression that this is valid Python, but I cannot find the correct way to accomplish the task at hand in Windows. Further, I really do not want to put everything in the same folder; even if that would be the easiest thing for the python files, the data and images folders will populate with hundreds of files over the course of execution, and I suspect that I will run into similar problems when trying to read and write from those folders.
I'm just starting out writing a program with the PyQt5 gui framework. I have a file, resource_loader.py, which is responsible for loading images etc.
The problem
Python crashes at the line where the image is loaded. I'm using IDLE (3.5) and after I run the program there is no output except for:
=============================== RESTART: Shell ===============================
Code - pretty much copy/pasted from a tutorial, file is called resource_loader.py
from PyQt5 import QtGui
import os
file_image = QtGui.QPixmap("file.png")
Things I've tried
file.png definitely is in the same directory as resource_loader.py
Changing up the variable names, just in case.
Moving the file to a location with no spaces in the path
Extra information
I am running resource_loader.py directly
I am using Linux Mint (18.3) Xfce if that's any use.
Thanks in advance.
It is required to place your code within a QApplication instance as follows:
import sys
import os
from PyQt5 import QtGui
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import (QApplication, QWidget)
app = QApplication(sys.argv)
file_image = QtGui.QPixmap("file.png")
sys.exit(app.exec_())
Background on the question: This is a previous PyQt project I am working on and trying to start the GUI. I have set an Anaconda Environment with Python 2.7 and used PyQt4. The Error is :-
File "gui/gui.py", line 26, in <module>
from qtpy.QtCore import (Qt, QFileSystemWatcher, QSettings, pyqtSignal)
ImportError: cannot import name pyqtSignal
Code :-
enter #import qt
from qtpy import QtCore, QtWidgets, QtGui, PYQT4 #changed from PYQT5
from qtpy.QtCore import (Qt, QFileSystemWatcher, QSettings, pyqtSignal)
Even after trying to setup the environment and other aspects to the best of my ability, I am unable to pinpoint why this error still pops up.Tried on Mac, it errors out similarly even on Ubuntu. Does anyone have an idea how to tackle this?
You're using qtpy rather than PyQt4 directly. According to Don't delete QtCore.{pyqtSignal,pyqtSlot,pyqtProperty} · Issue #76 · spyder-ide/qtpy · GitHub, they deliberately ditched PyQt-specific names like pyqtSignal and instead rename them upon import to generic names like Signal for uniformity. They comment that these names follow Qt5's naming scheme.
So you should just
from qtpy.QtCore import Qt, QFileSystemWatcher, QSettings, Signal
and rename all pyqtSignal to Signal elsewhere in your code.
I'm developping a small graphic application using Python 3 and PyQt5.
On the first computer I use, where only PyQt5 is installed, everything in my code is fine. But when I want to run my code on my other laptop, where both PyQt4 and PyQt5 are installed, I get the following error:
RuntimeError: the PyQt5.QtCore and PyQt4.QtCore modules both wrap the QObject class
Python interpreter locates the error in the file "ViewWindow.py", called from the main file.
As I have both PyQt4 and PyQt5 on this laptop, and because I can't uninstall PyQt4 (it would be too easy...), I wonder if it's possible to force use of PyQt5.QtCore, or something else to avoid this problem.
My configuration on this laptop: Debian 8, Python3.4, PyQt4 and 5 (without special configuration, installed from Debian repos), IDE = Spyder.
I put there first lines of my files main.py and ViewWindow.py.
# main.py
import sys
import sqlite3
import ViewWindow
from DataWindow import DataWindow
from PyQt5.QtCore import QObject # I tried adding this line, but nothing changed...
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import (QApplication,
QWidget,
QGridLayout,
QHBoxLayout,
QLabel,
QLineEdit,
QPushButton,
QTextEdit,
QVBoxLayout
)
class MainWindow(QWidget):
# Some cool stuff
# ViewWindow.py
import sys
import sqlite3
from PyQt5.QtCore import QObject # same thing than above, adding this line doesn't change the output.
from PyQt5.QtWidgets import (QApplication,
QWidget,
QGridLayout,
QLabel,
QPushButton,
QVBoxLayout
)
class ViewWindow(QWidget):
Does someone knows how to make this code run ?
Thanks,
Jerry M.
Edit: I tried to run that script forcing use of Python3, and it worked... It seems that problem comes from iPython3.
Thanks for your help.
A RuntimeError with message
the PyQt5.QtCore and PyQt4.QtCore modules both wrap the QObject class
is raised the moment you try to import PyQt5.QtCore while PyQt4.QtCore was already imported before.
This error is raised within SIP, which is used to connect to Qt. Like it states, it's only allowed to have one module claiming to wrap QObject. Thus the error just tells you, that you're using PyQt4 and PyQt5 at once.
So you need to find the module loading PyQt4 to configure it to use PyQt5 instead. Alternatively you could try to put from PyQt5.QtCore import QObject before any other import and hope, that the module, which usually imports from PyQt4, is adaptable and able to use PyQt5 as fallback.