-
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 43
/
Copy pathsetup.py
80 lines (77 loc) · 3.73 KB
/
setup.py
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
# Always prefer setuptools over distutils
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
import pathlib
here = pathlib.Path(__file__).parent.resolve()
# Get the long description from the README file
long_description = (here / "README.md").read_text(encoding="utf-8")
setup(
name="bandcamp-downloader", # Required
version="0.2.0", # Required
description="Download your collection from Bandcamp.", # Optional
long_description=long_description, # Optional
long_description_content_type="text/markdown", # Optional (see note above)
url="https://github.com/easlice/bandcamp-downloader", # Optional
author="Andrew Slice", # Optional
# Classifiers help users find your project by categorizing it.
#
# For a list of valid classifiers, see https://pypi.org/classifiers/
classifiers=[ # Optional
# How mature is this project? Common values are
# 3 - Alpha
# 4 - Beta
# 5 - Production/Stable
"Development Status :: 4 - Beta",
# Indicate who your project is intended for
"Intended Audience :: End Users/Desktop",
"Topic :: Multimedia :: Sound/Audio",
"Topic :: System :: Archiving",
# Pick your license as you wish
"License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License",
# Specify the Python versions you support here. In particular, ensure
# that you indicate you support Python 3. These classifiers are *not*
# checked by 'pip install'. See instead 'python_requires' below.
"Programming Language :: Python :: 3",
],
keywords="bandcamp,music", # Optional
# When your source code is in a subdirectory under the project root, e.g.
# `src/`, it is necessary to specify the `package_dir` argument.
#package_dir={"": "src"}, # Optional
# You can just specify package directories manually here if your project is
# simple. Or you can use find_packages().
#
# Alternatively, if you just want to distribute a single Python file, use
# the `py_modules` argument instead as follows, which will expect a file
# called `my_module.py` to exist:
#
# py_modules=["my_module"],
#
#packages=find_packages(where="src"), # Required
# Specify which Python versions you support. In contrast to the
# 'Programming Language' classifiers above, 'pip install' will check this
# and refuse to install the project if the version does not match. See
# https://packaging.python.org/guides/distributing-packages-using-setuptools/#python-requires
python_requires=">=3, <4",
# This field lists other packages that your project depends on to run.
# Any package you put here will be installed by pip when your project is
# installed, so they must be valid existing projects.
#
# For an analysis of "install_requires" vs pip's requirements files see:
# https://packaging.python.org/discussions/install-requires-vs-requirements/
install_requires=["beautifulsoup4", "browser_cookie3", "curl_cffi", "tqdm"], # Optional
# List additional URLs that are relevant to your project as a dict.
#
# This field corresponds to the "Project-URL" metadata fields:
# https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/#project-url-multiple-use
#
# Examples listed include a pattern for specifying where the package tracks
# issues, where the source is hosted, where to say thanks to the package
# maintainers, and where to support the project financially. The key is
# what's used to render the link text on PyPI.
project_urls={ # Optional
"Bug Reports": "https://github.com/easlice/bandcamp-downloader/issues",
"Source": "https://github.com/easlice/bandcamp-downloader",
},
scripts = [
'bandcamp-downloader.py'
],
)