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setup.py
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setup.py
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# Import our newly installed setuptools package.
import setuptools
print("This is a placeholder package. Please contact for removal.")
# Opens our README.md and assigns it to long_description.
with open("README.md", "r") as fh:
long_description = fh.read()
# Defines requests as a requirement in order for this package to operate. The dependencies of the project.
# requirements = ["requests<=2.21.0"]
# Function that takes several arguments. It assigns these values to our package.
setuptools.setup(
# Distribution name the package. Name must be unique so adding your username at the end is common.
name="PKG_NAME",
# Version number of your package. Semantic versioning is commonly used.
version="PKG_VERSION",
# Author name.
author="Ashish Bijlani",
# Author's email address.
author_email="ab@gmail.com",
# Short description that will show on the PyPi page.
description="A placeholder package",
# Long description that will display on the PyPi page. Uses the repo's README.md to populate this.
long_description=long_description,
# Defines the content type that the long_description is using.
long_description_content_type="text/markdown",
# The URL that represents the homepage of the project. Most projects link to the repo.
url="https://github.com/ashishbijlani/sample-pypi-package",
# Finds all packages within in the project and combines them into the distribution together.
packages=setuptools.find_packages(),
# requirements or dependencies that will be installed alongside your package when the user installs it via pip.
# install_requires=requirements,
# Gives pip some metadata about the package. Also displays on the PyPi page.
classifiers=[
"Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8",
"License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License",
"Operating System :: OS Independent",
],
# The version of Python that is required.
python_requires='>=3.6',
)