Pytron is a modern framework for building desktop applications using Python for the backend and web technologies (React, Vite) for the frontend. It combines the power of Python's ecosystem with the rich user interfaces of the web.
- Type-Safe Bridge: Automatically generate TypeScript definitions (
.d.ts) from your Python code. - Reactive State: Synchronize state seamlessly between Python and JavaScript.
- Advanced Serialization: Built-in support for Pydantic models, PIL Images, UUIDs, and more.
- System Integration: Native file dialogs, notifications, and shortcuts.
- Developer Experience: Hot-reloading, automatic virtual environment management, and easy packaging.
- Daemon & System Integration: New
hide/showAPIs andsystem_notificationsupport allow apps to run as daemons, show/hide windows programmatically, and emit native notifications across Windows/macOS/Linux. - Taskbar / Dock Progress & Icons: APIs to set taskbar progress and update the application icon at runtime (Windows taskbar, macOS Dock badge, basic Linux support).
- Native Dialogs: Cross-platform native file dialogs (open/save/folder) using the OS tools (Windows common dialogs, macOS AppleScript, Linux
zenity/kdialog) are exposed to theWebviewlayer. - Message Boxes: Unified
message_boxwith cross-platform fallbacks (native MessageBox on Windows,zenity/kdialogon Linux, AppleScript on macOS). - Packaging Improvements:
pytron packagecan now bundle a splash screen into PyInstaller builds (--splashsupport), and the Windows installer compression has been updated for better AV compatibility. - Serializer Enhancements:
PytronJSONEncodergained broader support (Pydantic models, PIL images -> data URIs, dataclasses, enums, timedeltas, complex numbers, slots, and iterable fallbacks) for safer frontend bridging. - Platform Interface Expanded: Platform backends now provide richer capabilities (notifications, dialogs, icon/app-id management, tray/daemon helpers).
- Python 3.11+ (3.7+ minimum supported)
- Node.js & npm (for frontend development)
Pytron uses a high-performance native engine on Linux that requires GTK3 and WebKit2GTK. Install them with:
# Ubuntu 22.04 / 24.04
sudo apt install libwebkit2gtk-4.1-0 libgtk-3-0Note
Pytron-Kit now includes a Linux Schism Guard. You no longer need to install python3-gi or PyGObject for most apps, as the Native Engine handles GLib/GTK isolation automatically to prevent crashes.
-
Install Pytron: Windows:
pip install pytron-kit
Linux / macOS (Recommended):
pipx install pytron-kit
Note: On modern Linux distros (Ubuntu 23.04+),
pipxinvolves less risk of breaking system packages (PEP 668). -
Initialize a New Project: This command scaffolds a new project, creates a virtual environment (
env/), installs initial dependencies, and sets up a frontend.# Default (React + Vite) pytron init my_app # Using a specific template (vue, svelte, next, etc.) pytron init my_app --template next
Supported templates:
react(default),vue,svelte,next(Next.js),vanilla,preact,lit,solid,qwik. -
Install project dependencies (recommended): After cloning or when you need to install/update dependencies for the project, use the CLI-managed installer which will create/use the
env/virtual environment automatically:# Creates env/ if missing and installs from requirements.txt pytron installNotes:
- This creates an
env/directory in the project root (if not already present) and runspip install -r requirements.txtinside it. - All subsequent
pytroncommands (run,package, etc.) will automatically prefer the project'senv/Python when present.
- This creates an
-
Run the App: Start the app in development mode (hot-reloading enabled). The CLI will use
env/Python automatically if anenv/exists in the project root.- Windows:
run.bat - Linux/Mac:
./run.sh
Or manually via the CLI:
pytron run --dev
- Windows:
Use the @app.expose decorator to make Python functions available to the frontend.
from pytron import App
from pydantic import BaseModel
app = App()
class User(BaseModel):
name: str
age: int
@app.expose
def get_user(user_id: int) -> User:
return User(name="Alice", age=30)
app.generate_types() # Generates frontend/src/pytron.d.ts
app.run()Import the client and call your functions with full TypeScript support. any registered function with "pytron_" prefix will be available as pytron_{function_name} and will not be proxied into the pytron object.
import pytron from 'pytron-client';
async function loadUser() {
const user = await pytron.get_user(1);
console.log(user.name); // Typed as string
}Sync data automatically.
Python:
app.state.counter = 0JavaScript:
console.log(pytron.state.counter); // 0
// Listen for changes
pytron.on('pytron:state-update', (change) => {
console.log(change.key, change.value);
});Control the window directly from JS.
pytron.minimize();
pytron.toggle_fullscreen();
pytron.close();The development mode in Pytron is designed for modern web development workflows.
pytron run --dev- Dual Hot Reloading:
- Frontend: Pytron detects your
npm run devscript (Vite/Next/WebPack) and proxies the window to your local dev server (e.g.,localhost:5173). This gives you Hot Module Replacement (HMR)—UI changes update instantly without a reload. - Backend: Pytron watches your Python files. If you change backend logic, the Python application performs a Hot Restart automatically.
- Frontend: Pytron detects your
- Debug Logging: If
debug: trueis set insettings.json, Pytron switches to verbose logging, showing bridge messages and binding invocations. - Non-Blocking UI: Pytron automatically runs synchronous Python functions in a background thread pool, ensuring that heavy Python tasks never freeze the UI.
Pytron uses a settings.json file in your project root to manage application configuration.
Example settings.json:
{
"title": "pytron app",
"pytron_version": "0.2.2",
"frontend_framework": "react",
"dimensions":[800,600],
"frameless": false,
"debug": true,
"url": "frontend/dist/index.html",
"icon": "assets/icon.ico",
"version": "1.0.0"
}- title: The window title and the name of your packaged executable.
- debug: Set to
trueto enable verbose logging and dev tools. - url: Entry point for the frontend (usually the built
index.html). In--devmode, this is overridden by the dev server URL. - icon: Path to your application icon (relative to project root).
Pytron provides a set of UI components to help you build a modern desktop application. They have preimplemented window controls and are ready to use.
npm install pytron-uithen import the webcomponents into your frontend app
import "pytron-ui/webcomponents/TitleBar.js";
//usage
<pytron-title-bar></pytron-title-bar>
//for react
import { TitleBar } from "pytron-ui/react";
//usage
<TitleBar></TitleBar>Distribute your app as a standalone executable. Pytron automatically reads your settings.json to determine the app name, version, and icon.
Note on File Permissions: When your app is installed in Program Files, it is read-only. If your app writes logs or databases using relative paths (e.g., logging.basicConfig(filename='app.log')), it will crash with PermissionError.
Pytron Solution: When running as a packaged app, Pytron automatically changes the Current Working Directory (CWD) to a safe user-writable path (e.g., %APPDATA%/MyApp). Your relative writes will safely end up there.
- Build:
pytron package
pytron init <name> [--template <name>]: Create a new project.pytron install [package]: Install dependencies.- Pin versions in
requirements.json. - Smartly resolving local path installs to package names.
- Pin versions in
pytron frontend install [package]: Install npm packages for the frontend (auto-detects directory).pytron run [--dev]: Run the application.pytron show: List installed Python packages and versions.pytron package: Build standalone executable.
Happy Coding with Pytron!
