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Installation instructions are abominably awful, feel like abandonware #156
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please submit a pull request showing the five minutes worth of effort that you would like to see done |
As I am not a maintainer, I cannot declare what the "recommended method" is. |
constructive suggestions are surely welcome. As it stands, I think it is unlikely that this issue report will produce useful change. |
This is a constructive issue from a longtime user who doesn't want Poetry to wither, relaying hard experiences from users I've recommended Poetry to. I cannot tell you what the "recommended method" should be. I'm just a longtime user. My constructive suggestion is:
|
pipx has been the preferred - and first-mentioned - installation method since python-poetry/poetry#8090 pull requests to improve clarity are invited. |
@dimbleby I can feel the efforts contributors have put into poetry to make it awesome. I love it! I am willing to help with it, will discuss more on this in discord. |
Installation should be easy, but Poetry is anything but, due to this website.
First, the landing page does not even mention or directly link to installation. If I arrive there and think "this looks cool, where do I click to install", there is nothing. No "click here to install", nothing. I have to guess that
Documentation > Introduction
contains anInstallation
section.That installation section begins with a confusing warning about virtual environments, but FAILS TO RECOMMEND an installation method. Instead it has 4 tabs.
The first is
pipx
. Foolish. If you want adoption, your first installation method should not require another 3rd party program. A third of potential new adopters have just clicked away, assuming Poetry is too much trouble and too niche to even install itself.Then there is
With Official Installer
. That sounds promising. Why is "the official installer" not the first tab? New users are confused. But it begins with this warning:WTF does this even mean? Is
install-poetry.py
the same as "The installer script" we are installing? Why is a red "STOP" error message at the top of this "official" installation method? Should a new user conclude that this "official" "installer script" is now deprecated in favor of something else? 60% of your remaining potential new adopters have clicked away, confused and annoyed at the troublesome abandonware they were recommended. Note that the linked installer script seems to have some issue with current Windows 11 + Python 3.13.Obviously, someone who has used Poetry for years knows the answers to the above questions, but that's not the point. These are all problems new users encounter when directed to use Poetry. Read your website from the point of view of a new user you're selling to. Make a recommended TLDR "DO THIS IF UNSURE" method plainly visible as the first tab, one that applies to new users who don't use
pipx
orpopy
or whatever trend of the year, without any years-old warnings that don't apply to them. New users want simplicity, not complexity. They are coming to Poetry to make their lives easier.When I point dev after dev to poetry and their installation experience is the above, that's a problem. Companies spend millions on SEO / easy onboarding. Poetry could at least spend 5 minutes to stop driving away 90% of its potential new adopters.
PS
Let's follow the first tab,
pipx
, as a new user. Step 1 is "Installpipx
":Ok, I guess we can install one third-party tool, let's follow that link and ...
lol. Is the problem evident yet?
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