Conda
and conda-forge
are both Python package managers. What is the appropriate choice when a package exists in both repositories? Django, for exam
There are some Python libraries that you cannot install with a simple conda install
since their channel is not available unless you apply conda-forge. From my experience, pip is more generic to look into different channel sources than conda.
For instance, if you want to install python-constraint
you can do it via pip install
but to install it via **cond **. you have to specify the channel - conda-forge
.
conda install -c conda-forge python-constraint // works
but not
conda install python-constraint
The short answer is that, in my experience generally, it doesn't matter which you use.
The long answer:
So conda-forge
is an additional channel from which packages may be installed. In this sense, it is not any more special than the default channel, or any of the other hundreds (thousands?) of channels that people have posted packages to. You can add your own channel if you sign up at https://anaconda.org and upload your own Conda packages.
Here we need to make the distinction, which I think you're not clear about from your phrasing in the question, between conda
, the cross-platform package manager, and conda-forge
, the package channel. Anaconda Inc. (formerly Continuum IO), the main developers of the conda
software, also maintain a separate channel of packages, which is the default when you type conda install packagename
without changing any options.
There are three ways to change the options for channels. The first two are done every time you install a package and the last one is persistent. The first one is to specify a channel every time you install a package:
conda install -c some-channel packagename
Of course, the package has to exist on that channel. This way will install packagename
and all its dependencies from some-channel
. Alternately, you can specify:
conda install some-channel::packagename
The package still has to exist on some-channel
, but now, only packagename
will be pulled from some-channel
. Any other packages that are needed to satisfy dependencies will be searched for from your default list of channels.
To see your channel configuration, you can write:
conda config --show channels
You can control the order that channels are searched with conda config
. You can write:
conda config --add channels some-channel
to add the channel some-channel
to the top of the channels
configuration list. This gives some-channel
the highest priority. Priority determines (in part) which channel is selected when more than one channel has a particular package. To add the channel to the end of the list and give it the lowest priority, type
conda config --append channels some-channel
If you would like to remove the channel that you added, you can do so by writing
conda config --remove channels some-channel
See
conda config -h
for more options.
With all of that said, there are four main reasons to use the conda-forge
channel instead of the defaults
channel maintained by Anaconda:
conda-forge
may be more up-to-date than those on the defaults
channelconda-forge
channel that aren't available from defaults
openblas
(from conda-forge
) instead of mkl
(from defaults
).The conda-forge channel is where you can find packages that have been built for conda but yet to be part of the official Anaconda distribution.
Generally, you can use any of them.
Anaconda has changed their Terms of Service so that "heavy commercial users" would have to pay, which doesn't include conda-forge
channel.
You probably would want to stick to conda-forge
if you don't want to pay for the usage. As stated in the docs:
conda config --add channels conda-forge
conda config --set channel_priority strict
conda install <package-name>
You could also use miniforge which has conda-forge
as the default channel, and supports ppc64le and aarch64 platforms as well as the other usual ones.