Many of the answers here are out of date for 2015 (although the initially accepted one from Daniel Roseman is not). Here's the current state of things:
- Binary packages are now distributed as wheels (
.whl
files)—not just on PyPI, but in third-party repositories like Christoph Gohlke's Extension Packages for Windows. pip
can handle wheels; easy_install
cannot.
- Virtual environments (which come built-in with 3.4, or can be added to 2.6+/3.1+ with virtualenv) have become a very important and prominent tool (and recommended in the official docs); they include
pip
out of the box, but don't even work properly with easy_install
.
- The
distribute
package that included easy_install
is no longer maintained. Its improvements over setuptools
got merged back into setuptools
. Trying to install distribute
will just install setuptools
instead.
easy_install
itself is only quasi-maintained.
- All of the cases where
pip
used to be inferior to easy_install
—installing from an unpacked source tree, from a DVCS repo, etc.—are long-gone; you can pip install .
, pip install git+https://
.
pip
comes with the official Python 2.7 and 3.4+ packages from python.org, and a pip
bootstrap is included by default if you build from source.
- The various incomplete bits of documentation on installing, using, and building packages have been replaced by the Python Packaging User Guide. Python's own documentation on Installing Python Modules now defers to this user guide, and explicitly calls out
pip
as "the preferred installer program".
- Other new features have been added to
pip
over the years that will never be in easy_install
. For example, pip
makes it easy to clone your site-packages by building a requirements file and then installing it with a single command on each side. Or to convert your requirements file to a local repo to use for in-house development. And so on.
The only good reason that I know of to use easy_install
in 2015 is the special case of using Apple's pre-installed Python versions with OS X 10.5-10.8. Since 10.5, Apple has included easy_install
, but as of 10.10 they still don't include pip
. With 10.9+, you should still just use get-pip.py
, but for 10.5-10.8, this has some problems, so it's easier to sudo easy_install pip
. (In general, easy_install pip
is a bad idea; it's only for OS X 10.5-10.8 that you want to do this.) Also, 10.5-10.8 include readline
in a way that easy_install
knows how to kludge around but pip
doesn't, so you also want to sudo easy_install readline
if you want to upgrade that.