Table Of Contents
Configure Kivy¶
The configuration file for kivy is named config.ini, and adheres to the standard INI format.
Locating the configuration file¶
The location of the configuration file is controlled by the environment variable KIVY_HOME:
<KIVY_HOME>/config.ini
On desktop, this defaults to:
<HOME_DIRECTORY>/.kivy/config.ini
Therefore, if your user is named “tito”, the file will be here:
- Windows:
C:\Users\tito\.kivy\config.ini
- OS X:
/Users/tito/.kivy/config.ini
- Linux:
/home/tito/.kivy/config.ini
On Android, this defaults to:
<ANDROID_APP_PATH>/.kivy/config.ini
If your app is named “org.kivy.launcher”, the file will be here:
/data/data/org.kivy.launcher/files/.kivy/config.ini
On iOS, this defaults to:
<HOME_DIRECTORY>/Documents/.kivy/config.ini
Local configuration¶
Sometimes it’s desired to change configuration only for certain applications or during testing of a separate part of Kivy for example input providers. To create a separate configuration file you can simply use these commands:
from kivy.config import Config
Config.read(<file>)
# set config
Config.write()
When a local configuration of single .ini
file isn’t enough, e.g. when
you want to have separate environment for garden, kivy logs and other things,
you’ll need to change the the KIVY_HOME
environment variable in your
application to get desired result:
import os
os.environ['KIVY_HOME'] = <folder>
or before each run of the application change it manually in the console:
Windows:
set KIVY_HOME=<folder>
Linux & OSX:
export KIVY_HOME=<folder>
After the change of KIVY_HOME
, the folder will behave exactly the same
as the default .kivy/
folder mentioned above.
Understanding config tokens¶
All the configuration tokens are explained in the kivy.config
module.