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Azure Quantum Development Kit

Welcome to the Azure Quantum Development Kit!

This repository contains tooling for the Q# language, specifically:

  • compiler: core compiler logic and command-line tooling
  • fuzz: fuzz testing infrastructure
  • jupyterlab: JupyterLab extension
  • language_service: Q# language service and editor features
  • library: Q# standard library
  • npm: Q# npm package
  • pip: Q# Python pip package
  • playground: simple website for interacting with Q#
  • resource_estimator: Implementation for the Azure Quantum Resource Estimator
  • vscode: Visual Studio Code extension
  • wasm: The bindings and logic for the WebAssembly module
  • widgets: The Q# Jupyter widgets Python package

There are also the tutorials and samples in the ./katas and ./samples directories, respectively.

Code from this repository powers the Q# development experience on https://quantum.microsoft.com.

Building

To build this repository there are dependencies that need to be installed. These are:

The build script will check these dependencies and their versions and fail if not met. (Or run python ./prereqs.py directly to check if the minimum required versions are installed).

To build, in the root directory run python ./build.py. By default this will run a release build of each project, including running tests and checks such as linting. Run with the --help option for detailed usage.

Playground

The playground is a small website that loads the Q# editor, compiler, samples, katas, and documentation for the standard library. It's a way to manually validate any changes you make to these components.

To see instructions for building the playground, refer to Building the Playground Locally.

Python

When building the Python packages (pip and jupyterlab), if the build script does not detect a current Python virtual environment, it will automatically create one under pip/.venv or jupyterlab/.venv. When developing locally, you can use these virtual environments to run the tests by running source .venv/bin/activate (Linux/MacOS) or .venv/Scripts/activate.bat (Windows).

Code editing

The easiest way to develop in this repo is to use VS Code. When you open the project root, by default VS Code will recommend you install the extensions listed in .vscode/extensions.json. These extensions provide language services for editing, as well as linters and formatters to ensure the code meets the requirements (which are checked by the build.py script and CI).

Some settings are recommended (but not enforced) to make development easier. These are in the .vscode/*.shared.json files. If the Workspace Config+ extension is installed, this will automatically apply these settings, as well as overrides from your own corresponding .vscode/*.local.json settings. If you don't install this extension, you can use these as a reference for editing your own .vscode/*.json settings files. (See the extension home page for more details).

Debugging

Debugging the VS Code extension is best done inside VS Code by launching with F5 (or Run / Start Debugging from the VS Code menu). The launch.shared.json file will be applied if using the Workspace Config+ extension outlined above, and this includes a command-line flag to launch the development instance with a profile named dev. (If not familiar with VS Code profiles see https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/configure/profiles).

This allows you to develop in the main VS Code instance with all your regular extensions enabled (including the QDK), but use a dev profile that only includes the minimal extensions for testing (e.g. GitHub Copilot, Python, Jupyter). This avoids the issue where launching with all extensions disabled stops you from testing Copilot, Python, etc., but launching with your default extensions enabled will cause conflicts with the installed QDK and the one being debugged.

By default the debugger will launch a VS Code instance with the ./samples directory open in the workspace. The directory samples/scratch is excluded from the repo via .gitignore, so you can work on temporary files in this directory without them cluttering your git diff or accidentally checking them in.

Citation

If you use Q#, Azure Quantum Development Kit, or Azure Quantum Resource Estimator, please cite as follows:

  • Azure Quantum Development Kit:
@software{Microsoft_Azure_Quantum_Development,
   author = {{Microsoft}},
   license = {MIT},
   title = {{Azure Quantum Development Kit}},
   url = {https://github.com/microsoft/qsharp} }
  • Q# programming language:
@inproceedings{Svore_2018, series={RWDSL2018},
   title={{Q\#: Enabling Scalable Quantum Computing and Development with a High-level DSL}},
   url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3183895.3183901},
   DOI={10.1145/3183895.3183901},
   booktitle={Proceedings of the Real World Domain Specific Languages Workshop 2018},
   publisher={ACM},
   author={Svore, Krysta and Geller, Alan and Troyer, Matthias and Azariah, John and Granade, Christopher and Heim, Bettina and Kliuchnikov, Vadym and Mykhailova, Mariia and Paz, Andres and Roetteler, Martin},
   year={2018},
   month=feb, collection={RWDSL2018} }
  • Azure Quantum Resource Estimator:
@inproceedings{Azure_Quantum_Resource_Estimator,
   author = {van Dam, Wim and Mykhailova, Mariia and Soeken, Mathias},
   title = {{Using Azure Quantum Resource Estimator for Assessing Performance of Fault Tolerant Quantum Computation}},
   year = {2023},
   isbn = {9798400707858},
   publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
   address = {New York, NY, USA},
   url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3624062.3624211},
   doi = {10.1145/3624062.3624211},
   booktitle = {Proceedings of the SC '23 Workshops of The International Conference on High Performance Computing, Network, Storage, and Analysis},
   pages = {1414–1419},
   numpages = {6},
   series = {SC-W '23} }

Feedback

If you have feedback about the content in this repository, please let us know by filing a new issue!

Reporting Security Issues

Security issues and bugs should be reported privately following our security issue documentation.

Contributing

This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com.

When you submit a pull request, a CLA bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., status check, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.

This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact [email protected] with any additional questions or comments.

For more details, please see CONTRIBUTING.md.

Legal and Licensing

Trademarks

This project may contain trademarks or logos for projects, products, or services. Authorized use of Microsoft trademarks or logos is subject to and must follow Microsoft's Trademark & Brand Guidelines. Use of Microsoft trademarks or logos in modified versions of this project must not cause confusion or imply Microsoft sponsorship. Any use of third-party trademarks or logos are subject to those third-party's policies.