This repository contains the pytket-qir extension, using Quantinuum's pytket quantum SDK.
Pytket is a python module for interfacing with tket, a quantum computing toolkit and optimising compiler developed by Quantinuum.
pytket-qir
is an extension to pytket
that allows pytket
circuits to
be converted to qir.
Some useful links:
pytket-qir
is available for Python 3.10, 3.11 and 3.12, on Linux, MacOS
and Windows. To install, run:
pip install pytket-qir
This will install pytket
if it isn't already installed, and add new classes
and methods into the pytket.extensions
namespace.
Please file bugs and feature requests on the Github issue tracker.
There is also a Slack channel for discussion and support. Click here to join.
First setup your virtual environment (or ignore if you already have it):
python -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
Then install required dependencies:
pip install -U pip setuptools
pip install build pre-commit pytest wheel mypy~=1.4 black~=23.7 pylint~=2.17 ruff==0.0.282
pre-commit install
Then install this extension in editable mode, simply change to this directory, and run:
pip install -e .
You could also use make
targets such as:
make install # for installation
make dev # for editable install
make lint # run linters and formatters
make tests # for running tests
make build # for source and wheel distribution packages
make clean # to clean up autogenerated files
Pull requests are welcome. To make a PR, first fork the repo, make your proposed
changes on the main
branch, and open a PR from your fork. If it passes
tests and is accepted after review, it will be merged in.
All code should be formatted using black, with default options. This is checked on the CI.
On the CI, mypy is used as a static
type checker and all submissions must pass its checks. You should therefore run
mypy
locally on any changed files before submitting a PR. Because of the way
extension modules embed themselves into the pytket
namespace this is a little
complicated, but it should be sufficient to run the script ./mypy-check
(passing as a single argument the root directory of the module to test).
We use ruff and pylint
on the CI to check compliance with a set of style requirements (listed in ruff.toml
and .pylintrc
).
You should run pylint
over any changed files before submitting a PR, to catch any issues.
An easy way to meet all formatting and linting requirements is to issue pre-commit run --all-files
or make lint
before sending a PR.
To run the tests:
-
cd
into thetests
directory; - ensure you have installed
pytest
,hypothesis
, and any modules listed in thetest-requirements.txt
file (all viapip
); - run
pytest
.
When adding a new feature, please add a test for it. When fixing a bug, please add a test that demonstrates the fix.