--- id: library title: "Getting started - Library" --- ## Installation ### Pip [![PyPI version](https://badge.fury.io/py/playwright.svg)](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/playwright/) ```bash pip install --upgrade pip pip install playwright playwright install ``` ### Conda [![Anaconda version](https://img.shields.io/conda/v/microsoft/playwright)](https://anaconda.org/Microsoft/playwright) ```bash conda config --add channels conda-forge conda config --add channels microsoft conda install playwright playwright install ``` These commands download the Playwright package and install browser binaries for Chromium, Firefox and WebKit. To modify this behavior see [installation parameters](./browsers.md#installing-browsers). ## Usage Once installed, you can `import` Playwright in a Python script, and launch any of the 3 browsers (`chromium`, `firefox` and `webkit`). ```py from playwright.sync_api import sync_playwright with sync_playwright() as p: browser = p.chromium.launch() page = browser.new_page() page.goto("http://playwright.dev") print(page.title()) browser.close() ``` Playwright supports two variations of the API: synchronous and asynchronous. If your modern project uses [asyncio](https://docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio.html), you should use async API: ```py import asyncio from playwright.async_api import async_playwright async def main(): async with async_playwright() as p: browser = await p.chromium.launch() page = await browser.new_page() await page.goto("http://playwright.dev") print(await page.title()) await browser.close() asyncio.run(main()) ``` ## First script In our first script, we will navigate to `whatsmyuseragent.org` and take a screenshot in WebKit. ```py from playwright.sync_api import sync_playwright with sync_playwright() as p: browser = p.webkit.launch() page = browser.new_page() page.goto("http://whatsmyuseragent.org/") page.screenshot(path="example.png") browser.close() ``` By default, Playwright runs the browsers in headless mode. To see the browser UI, pass the `headless=False` flag while launching the browser. You can also use [`option: slowMo`] to slow down execution. Learn more in the debugging tools [section](./debug.md). ```py firefox.launch(headless=False, slow_mo=50) ``` ## Interactive mode (REPL) You can launch the interactive python REPL: ```bash python ``` and then launch Playwright within it for quick experimentation: ```py >>> from playwright.sync_api import sync_playwright >>> playwright = sync_playwright().start() # Use playwright.chromium, playwright.firefox or playwright.webkit # Pass headless=False to launch() to see the browser UI >>> browser = playwright.chromium.launch() >>> page = browser.new_page() >>> page.goto("http://whatsmyuseragent.org/") >>> page.screenshot(path="example.png") >>> browser.close() >>> playwright.stop() ``` Async REPL such as `asyncio` REPL: ```bash python -m asyncio ``` ```py >>> from playwright.async_api import async_playwright >>> playwright = await async_playwright().start() >>> browser = await playwright.chromium.launch() >>> page = await browser.new_page() >>> await page.goto("http://whatsmyuseragent.org/") >>> await page.screenshot(path="example.png") >>> await browser.close() >>> await playwright.stop() ``` ## Pyinstaller You can use Playwright with [Pyinstaller](https://www.pyinstaller.org/) to create standalone executables. ```py title="main.py" from playwright.sync_api import sync_playwright with sync_playwright() as p: browser = p.chromium.launch() page = browser.new_page() page.goto("http://whatsmyuseragent.org/") page.screenshot(path="example.png") browser.close() ``` If you want to bundle browsers with the executables: ```bash tab=bash-bash PLAYWRIGHT_BROWSERS_PATH=0 playwright install chromium pyinstaller -F main.py ``` ```batch tab=bash-batch set PLAYWRIGHT_BROWSERS_PATH=0 playwright install chromium pyinstaller -F main.py ``` ```powershell tab=bash-powershell $env:PLAYWRIGHT_BROWSERS_PATH="0" playwright install chromium pyinstaller -F main.py ``` :::note Bundling the browsers with the executables will generate bigger binaries. It is recommended to only bundle the browsers you use. ::: ## Known issues ### `time.sleep()` leads to outdated state Most likely you don't need to wait manually, since Playwright has [auto-waiting](./actionability.md). If you still rely on it, you should use `page.wait_for_timeout(5000)` instead of `time.sleep(5)` and it is better to not wait for a timeout at all, but sometimes it is useful for debugging. In these cases, use our wait (`wait_for_timeout`) method instead of the `time` module. This is because we internally rely on asynchronous operations and when using `time.sleep(5)` they can't get processed correctly. ### incompatible with `SelectorEventLoop` of `asyncio` on Windows Playwright runs the driver in a subprocess, so it requires `ProactorEventLoop` of `asyncio` on Windows because `SelectorEventLoop` does not supports async subprocesses. On Windows Python 3.7, Playwright sets the default event loop to `ProactorEventLoop` as it is default on Python 3.8+. ### Threading Playwright's API is not thread-safe. If you are using Playwright in a multi-threaded environment, you should create a playwright instance per thread. See [threading issue](https://github.com/microsoft/playwright-python/issues/623) for more details.