Skip to main content

A Python library for creating Quantum Instruction Language (Quil) programs.

Project description

PyQuil: Quantum programming in Python

binder docs docker pepy pypi slack

PyQuil is a Python library for quantum programming using Quil, the quantum instruction language developed at Rigetti Computing. PyQuil serves three main functions:

PyQuil has a ton of other features, which you can learn more about in the docs. However, you can also keep reading below to get started with running your first quantum program!

Quickstart with interactive tutorial notebooks

Without installing anything, you can quickly get started with quantum programming by exploring our interactive Jupyter notebook tutorials and examples. To run them in a preconfigured execution environment on Binder, click the "launch binder" badge at the top of the README or the link here! To learn more about the tutorials and how you can add your own, visit the rigetti/forest-tutorials repository. If you'd rather set everything up locally, or are interested in contributing to pyQuil, continue onto the next section for instructions on installing pyQuil and the Forest SDK.

Installing pyQuil and the Forest SDK

pypi conda-forge conda-rigetti

PyQuil can be installed using conda, pip, or from source. To install it from PyPI (via pip), do the following:

pip install pyquil

To instead install pyQuil from source, do the following from within the repository after cloning it:

pip install -e .

If you choose to use pip, we highly recommend installing pyQuil within a virtual environment.

PyQuil, along with quilc, the QVM, and other libraries, make up what is called the Forest SDK. To make full use of pyQuil, you will need to additionally have installed quilc and the QVM. For more information, check out the docs!

Running your first quantum program

In just a few lines, we can use pyQuil with the Forest SDK to simulate a Bell state!

from pyquil import get_qc, Program
from pyquil.gates import CNOT, H, MEASURE
 
qvm = get_qc('2q-qvm')
 
p = Program()
p += H(0)
p += CNOT(0, 1)
ro = p.declare('ro', 'BIT', 2)
p += MEASURE(0, ro[0])
p += MEASURE(1, ro[1])
p.wrap_in_numshots_loop(10)

qvm.run(p).get_register_map()['ro'].tolist()

The output of the above program should look something like the following, the statistics of which are consistent with a two-qubit entangled state.

[[0, 0],
 [1, 1],
 [1, 1],
 [1, 1],
 [1, 1],
 [0, 0],
 [0, 0],
 [1, 1],
 [0, 0],
 [0, 0]]

Using the Forest SDK, you can simulate the operation of a real quantum processor (QPU). If you would like to run on the real QPUs in our lab in Berkeley, you can sign up for an account on Quantum Cloud Services (QCS)!

Joining the Forest community

If you'd like to get involved with pyQuil and Forest, joining the Rigetti Forest Slack Workspace is a great place to start! You can do so by clicking the invite link in the previous sentence, or in the badge at the top of this README. The Slack Workspace is a great place to ask general questions, join high-level design discussions, and hear about updates to pyQuil and the Forest SDK.

To go a step further and start contributing to the development of pyQuil, good first steps are reporting a bug, requesting a feature, or picking up one of the issues with the good first issue or help wanted labels. Once you find an issue to work on, make sure to fork this repository and then open a pull request once your changes are ready. For more information on all the ways you can contribute to pyQuil (along with some helpful tips for developers and maintainers) check out our Contributing Guide!

To see what people have contributed in the past, check out the Changelog for a detailed list of all announcements, improvements, changes, and bugfixes. The Releases page for pyQuil contains similar information, but with links to the pull request for each change and its corresponding author. Thanks for contributing to pyQuil! 🙂

Citing pyQuil, Forest, and Quantum Cloud Services

zenodo

If you use pyQuil, Grove, or other parts of the Forest SDK in your research, please cite the Quil specification using the following BibTeX snippet:

@misc{smith2016practical,
    title={A Practical Quantum Instruction Set Architecture},
    author={Robert S. Smith and Michael J. Curtis and William J. Zeng},
    year={2016},
    eprint={1608.03355},
    archivePrefix={arXiv},
    primaryClass={quant-ph}
}

Additionally, if your research involves taking data on Rigetti quantum processors (QPUs) via the Quantum Cloud Services (QCS) platform, please reference the QCS paper using the following BibTeX snippet:

@article{Karalekas_2020,
    title = {A quantum-classical cloud platform optimized for variational hybrid algorithms},
    author = {Peter J Karalekas and Nikolas A Tezak and Eric C Peterson
              and Colm A Ryan and Marcus P da Silva and Robert S Smith},
    year = 2020,
    month = {apr},
    publisher = {{IOP} Publishing},
    journal = {Quantum Science and Technology},
    volume = {5},
    number = {2},
    pages = {024003},
    doi = {10.1088/2058-9565/ab7559},
    url = {https://doi.org/10.1088%2F2058-9565%2Fab7559},
}

The preprint of the QCS paper is available on arXiv, and the supplementary interactive notebooks and datasets for the paper can be found in the rigetti/qcs-paper repository.

License

PyQuil is licensed under the Apache License 2.0.

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

pyquil-4.9.0rc2.tar.gz (166.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

pyquil-4.9.0rc2-py3-none-any.whl (200.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file pyquil-4.9.0rc2.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: pyquil-4.9.0rc2.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 166.2 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.8.2 CPython/3.12.2 Linux/6.5.0-1017-azure

File hashes

Hashes for pyquil-4.9.0rc2.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 70c8fcc1b3b0028c1006967402c3b5fe78d2bcbe798645ef17fd25b75c1810f5
MD5 34007409b57b4d202b996df6ef372c14
BLAKE2b-256 872c9dbce5a694a63b59814a4e85729475246a1f38cfdd38c7a31d9470de3fd2

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file pyquil-4.9.0rc2-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: pyquil-4.9.0rc2-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 200.0 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.8.2 CPython/3.12.2 Linux/6.5.0-1017-azure

File hashes

Hashes for pyquil-4.9.0rc2-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 807978454407cf86a65bbbc8d1f4779b257b3f9441a5291405496c7a73a3accb
MD5 55a3ede1cb1a7aecf2e937ee07c99cbf
BLAKE2b-256 c40bae1f6c2793adb5a5100a8a98ee413d057caac160d4a21c938506501232ae

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page