Installing pyxem#

There are a couple of different ways to install pyxem. The easiest way is to use the hyperspy-bundle. If you don’t have much experience with managing Python environments, we highly recommend using the hyperspy-bundle<https://hyperspy.org/hyperspy-bundle/download.html>_. The bundle is a pre-configured Python environment that includes pyxem and all its dependencies.

It includes many other packages that are useful for electron microscopy data analysis, such as Py4dSTEM, abTEM, and HyperSpy. It also includes the Jupyter notebook and Jupyter lab pre-configured as well as dask-distributed for parallel computing and the ipywidgets for interactive visualisation.

Installing using Conda/Mamba#

If you are more experienced with managing python environments, you can install pyxem into an existing environment. The easiest way to do this is using conda/mamba.

Note

Installing some of the visualization tools such as ipympl install much better using mamba than conda. If you are having trouble installing pyxem, try using mamba instead.

ipympl is a backend for matplotlib that allows for interactive plotting in the Jupyter but is particularly a pain sometimes. If you have having trouble you can always change your url from http://localhost:8888/lab to http://localhost:8888/notebooks and use the classic notebook instead. There are less features but it is more stable in my experience.

conda install -c conda-forge pyxem

Installing using pip#

You can also install pyxem using pip if you want. In that case you can install pyxem using:

pip install pyxem

Installing from source#

If you want to install the development version of pyxem, you can install it from source. First clone the repository using:

git clone https://github.com/pyxem/pyxem.git

Then navigate into the pyxem directory and install the dependencies using:

pip install -r requirements.txt

Finally, install pyxem using:

pip install -e .