A Cookiecutter template for building Python apps that will run under macOS.
The easiest way to use this project is to not use it at all - at least, not
directly. Briefcase is a tool that
uses this template, rolling it out using data extracted from a
pyproject.toml
configuration file.
However, if you do want use this template directly...
Install cookiecutter. This is a tool used to bootstrap complex project templates:
$ pip install cookiecutter
Run cookiecutter
on the template:
$ cookiecutter https://github.com/beeware/briefcase-macOS-app-template
This will ask you for a number of details of your application, including the
name of your application (which should be a valid PyPI identifier), and
the Formal Name of your application (the full name you use to describe
your app). The remainder of these instructions will assume a name of
my-project
, and a formal name of My Project
.
Obtain a Python Apple support package for macOS, and extract it into
the My Project/My Project.app/Contents/Resources/Suppoort
directory
generated by the template.
Add your code to the template, into the
My Project/My Project.app/Contents/Resources/app
directory. At the very
minimum, you need to have an app/<app name>/__main__.py
file that
defines an entry point that will start your application.
If your code has any dependencies, they should be installed into the
My Project/My Project.app/Contents/Resources/app_packages
directory.
If you've done this correctly, a project with a formal name of My Project
,
with an app name of my-project
should have a directory structure that
looks something like:
My Project/ My Project.app/ Contents/ MacOS/ My Project Resources/ app/ README my_project/ __init__.py __main__.py app_packages/ README ... Support/ ... VERSIONS my-project.icns Info.plist Entitlements.plist briefcase.toml
The My Project.app
directory should identify as an macOS application that
can be started by clicking on the application icon in Finder. It can also be
distributed as a standalone package.
Of course, running Python code isn't very interesting by itself - you won't be able to do any console input or output, because a macOS app doesn't display a console.
To do something interesting, you'll need to work with the native macOS system libraries to draw widgets and respond to user input. The Rubicon Objective C bridging library can be used to interface with the macOS system libraries. Alternatively, you could use a cross-platform widget toolkit that supports macOS (such as Toga) to provide a GUI for your application.
If you have any external library dependencies (like Toga, or anything other
third-party library), you should install the library code into the
app_packages
directory. This directory is the same as a site_packages
directory on a desktop Python install.
If, when you run your application, you get an error of:
LSOpenURLsWithRole() failed with error -10810 for the file /Users/.../My Project.app.
then your application is crashing during startup. This might indicate a problem with the Briefcase template; however, it's more likely a problem with your code - probably a syntax error, or a missing dependency.
To get more helpful debugging information, you can run the application directly from the command line. Although it presents as a single icon in Finder, internally a macOS application is a folder with a specific structure, and an entry point matching the name of the application. We can use this entry point to manually start the application directly from the command line.
If your application is called My Project
, you can start the application by
running:
$ My\ Project/My\ Project.app/Contents/MacOS/My\ Project
This starts the application the same way as Finder, but outputs any Python errors to the console.
If the problem is a syntax error, you can fix your code.
If it's a dependency problem, ensure that any required dependencies have been
installed into the Contents/Resources/app_packages
directory.
If it's a problem with the execution environment, you can modify the entry
point script. My\ Project/My\ Project.app/Contents/MacOS/My\ Project
is a
simple Bash script that starts the python interpreter after setting some
environment variables. If necessary, you can modify this script.
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