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The issue you've run into with pixi being project based vs conda's management of a global env registry is one that has been discussed a number of times, but there is a particularly lengthy one here: Currently the best, although not ideal, option is to use the The downside of specifying the manifest path is that it's verbose and requires you to know where that file is located on your system. On the prefix.dev discord, someone posted a shell script a while back with an example of how to create an activate like command: |
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Thank you for the detailed response. I appreciate the links and suggestions. I'll be following #1021. Hopefully, in the future as Pixi gets more fleshed out, it will be able to handle my use case in a more streamlined manner. |
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I'm a Bioinformatics scientist and manage the executables framework at my workplace. I currently use Conda to provide isolated environments for various production pipelines which have different dependencies. Apparently Pixi's theme is development with the project being the central focus. One has to enter into a project directory before one can enter into a particular environment shell. With Conda, we can activate an environment and process data no matter the cwd. I haven't yet seem how I can configure Pixi to work similarly. Is it even possible?
In addition, I've found "Pixi search" a bit limiting. There's no way to show, for instance, all Python versions available on a particular channel. It's only the latest that is shown.
What I like about Pixi is that it's built with Rust, that it's very speedy, and that it allows for installation of applications globally; however, its theme is development. It would be nice to have a similar tool focused on production.
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