pyscaffold dependencies

Pyscaffold is used in Python projects. Template tool for putting up the scaffold of a Python project It has 8 direct runtime dependencies. Check its dependency graph on PyDeps to understand the full transitive dependency tree, reverse dependents, known CVEs, and license compatibility before installing.

What is pyscaffold?

Template tool for putting up the scaffold of a Python project

What are the dependencies of pyscaffold?

pyscaffold declares 8 direct runtime dependencies on PyPI. Each one is resolved into the full dependency tree below:

pyscaffold transitive dependencies

Beyond its direct dependencies, pyscaffold can pull in further packages through its dependency tree. PyDeps resolves the entire chain from PyPI and deps.dev so you can see every transitive (nested) dependency of pyscaffold, expand any node on demand, and understand the full set of code that ships when you run pip install pyscaffold.

Does pyscaffold have known vulnerabilities (CVEs)?

PyDeps checks pyscaffold and every package in its dependency tree against the OSV vulnerability database in real time. For each CVE you can see the severity, the affected version ranges, and the first fixed version, so you know exactly which pyscaffold version is safe to install before you ship.

What license does pyscaffold use?

pyscaffold is distributed under the MIT license. PyDeps also shows the license of every dependency in the tree so you can audit license compatibility across your whole pyscaffold install, not just the top-level package.

How to install pyscaffold with all dependencies

Install from PyPI with pip install pyscaffold. For offline or air-gapped environments, PyDeps can download pyscaffold together with every resolved dependency as wheel files in a single bundle, matched to your target Python version and operating system.

Which packages depend on pyscaffold?

Switch to the dependents view to see the reverse dependencies of pyscaffold — the PyPI packages that list pyscaffold as a requirement. Reverse dependencies are a strong signal of how widely a package is trusted and how disruptive a breaking change would be.

Packages related to pyscaffold

PyDeps