* python: replace pre-commit with prek, add PEP 723 script deps, clean up dev dependencies - Replace pre-commit with prek (Rust-native, faster pre-commit alternative) - Move supported hooks to repo: builtin for zero-clone speed - Add new builtin hooks: trailing-whitespace, check-merge-conflict, detect-private-key, check-added-large-files - Update all hook versions to latest (pre-commit-hooks v6, pyupgrade v3.21.2, bandit 1.9.3, uv-pre-commit 0.10.0) - Add PEP 723 inline script metadata to 34 samples with external deps - Remove autogen-agentchat/autogen-ext from dev deps (now declared per-sample) - Remove unused dev deps: pytest-env, tomli-w - Add agent-framework-core>=1.0.0b260130 lower bound to all 21 packages - Update CI workflow to use j178/prek-action - Update docs: DEV_SETUP.md, AGENTS.md, CODING_STANDARD.md, SAMPLE_GUIDELINES.md * updated lock * python: fix prek config paths for local execution and CI workflow Remove global 'files: ^python/' filter and strip python/ prefix from all path patterns in .pre-commit-config.yaml so prek finds files when run from the python/ directory. Update CI workflow to use --cd python instead of --config path. Include trailing whitespace fixes and dev dependency cleanup. * python: move helper scripts to scripts/ folder and exclude from checks * python: exclude AGENTS.md from prek markdown code lint * python: exclude AGENTS.md and azure_ai_search sample from markdown lint * fix m365 sample * python: ignore CPY rule for samples with PEP 723 headers * fix in dev_setup * python: replace aiofiles with regular open in samples * python: suppress reportUnusedImport in markdown code block checker * python: use samples pyright config for markdown code block checker Write a temp pyrightconfig.json matching pyrightconfig.samples.json rules (typeCheckingMode=off, only reportMissingImports and reportAttributeAccessIssue). Filter output to only fail on these rules since syntax-level errors (top-level await, undefined vars) are expected in README documentation snippets. * python: use markdown-code-lint with fixed globs instead of prek file list The prek-markdown-code-lint task received all changed files including non-README markdown and files with pre-existing broken imports. Replace with the standard markdown-code-lint task which uses the correct glob patterns (README.md, packages/**/README.md, samples/**/*.md). * python: exclude READMEs with pre-existing broken imports from markdown lint * python: fix broken README code snippets instead of excluding them - ag-ui: replace TextContent (removed) with content.type == 'text' - durabletask: fix import path to durabletask.worker.TaskHubGrpcWorker - orchestrations: use constructor params instead of .participants() method - observability: mark deprecated code blocks as plain text, filter reportMissingImports to agent_framework modules only - remove README excludes from markdown-code-lint task * add revision to gaia download * feat(python): parallelize checks across packages Run (package × task) cross-product in parallel using ThreadPoolExecutor and subprocesses. Key changes: - Add scripts/task_runner.py with shared parallel execution engine - Update run_tasks_in_packages_if_exists.py to accept multiple tasks - Update run_tasks_in_changed_packages.py with --files flag and parallel support - Add check-packages poe task (fmt+lint+pyright+mypy in parallel) - Add prek-markdown-code-lint and prek-samples-check with change detection - Split CI code quality workflow into parallel prek and mypy jobs - Update DEV_SETUP.md to document new parallel behavior Core package changes still trigger checks on all packages. * feat(ci): split code quality into 4 parallel jobs Split the single prek job into parallel jobs: - pre-commit-hooks: lightweight hooks (SKIP=poe-check) - package-checks: fmt/lint/pyright/mypy via check-packages - samples-markdown: samples-lint, samples-syntax, markdown-code-lint - mypy: change-detected mypy checks All 4 jobs run concurrently (×2 Python versions = 8 runners). * feat(ci): use only Python 3.10 for code quality checks * refactor(python): add future annotations and remove quoted types Add `from __future__ import annotations` to 93 package files that used quoted string annotations, then run pyupgrade --py310-plus to remove the now-unnecessary quotes. Fixes https://github.com/microsoft/agent-framework/issues/3578
Get Started with Microsoft Agent Framework for Python Developers
Quick Install
We recommend two common installation paths depending on your use case.
1. Development mode
If you are exploring or developing locally, install the entire framework with all sub-packages:
pip install agent-framework --pre
This installs the core and every integration package, making sure that all features are available without additional steps. The --pre flag is required while Agent Framework is in preview. This is the simplest way to get started.
2. Selective install
If you only need specific integrations, you can install at a more granular level. This keeps dependencies lighter and focuses on what you actually plan to use. Some examples:
# Core only
# includes Azure OpenAI and OpenAI support by default
# also includes workflows and orchestrations
pip install agent-framework-core --pre
# Core + Azure AI integration
pip install agent-framework-azure-ai --pre
# Core + Microsoft Copilot Studio integration
pip install agent-framework-copilotstudio --pre
# Core + both Microsoft Copilot Studio and Azure AI integration
pip install agent-framework-microsoft agent-framework-azure-ai --pre
This selective approach is useful when you know which integrations you need, and it is the recommended way to set up lightweight environments.
Supported Platforms:
- Python: 3.10+
- OS: Windows, macOS, Linux
1. Setup API Keys
Set as environment variables, or create a .env file at your project root:
OPENAI_API_KEY=sk-...
OPENAI_CHAT_MODEL_ID=...
...
AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY=...
AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT=...
AZURE_OPENAI_CHAT_DEPLOYMENT_NAME=...
...
AZURE_AI_PROJECT_ENDPOINT=...
AZURE_AI_MODEL_DEPLOYMENT_NAME=...
You can also override environment variables by explicitly passing configuration parameters to the chat client constructor:
from agent_framework.azure import AzureOpenAIChatClient
chat_client = AzureOpenAIChatClient(
api_key='',
endpoint='',
deployment_name='',
api_version='',
)
See the following setup guide for more information.
2. Create a Simple Agent
Create agents and invoke them directly:
import asyncio
from agent_framework import ChatAgent
from agent_framework.openai import OpenAIChatClient
async def main():
agent = ChatAgent(
chat_client=OpenAIChatClient(),
instructions="""
1) A robot may not injure a human being...
2) A robot must obey orders given it by human beings...
3) A robot must protect its own existence...
Give me the TLDR in exactly 5 words.
"""
)
result = await agent.run("Summarize the Three Laws of Robotics")
print(result)
asyncio.run(main())
# Output: Protect humans, obey, self-preserve, prioritized.
3. Directly Use Chat Clients (No Agent Required)
You can use the chat client classes directly for advanced workflows:
import asyncio
from agent_framework import ChatMessage
from agent_framework.openai import OpenAIChatClient
async def main():
client = OpenAIChatClient()
messages = [
ChatMessage("system", ["You are a helpful assistant."]),
ChatMessage("user", ["Write a haiku about Agent Framework."])
]
response = await client.get_response(messages)
print(response.messages[0].text)
"""
Output:
Agents work in sync,
Framework threads through each task—
Code sparks collaboration.
"""
asyncio.run(main())
4. Build an Agent with Tools and Functions
Enhance your agent with custom tools and function calling:
import asyncio
from typing import Annotated
from random import randint
from pydantic import Field
from agent_framework import ChatAgent
from agent_framework.openai import OpenAIChatClient
def get_weather(
location: Annotated[str, Field(description="The location to get the weather for.")],
) -> str:
"""Get the weather for a given location."""
conditions = ["sunny", "cloudy", "rainy", "stormy"]
return f"The weather in {location} is {conditions[randint(0, 3)]} with a high of {randint(10, 30)}°C."
def get_menu_specials() -> str:
"""Get today's menu specials."""
return """
Special Soup: Clam Chowder
Special Salad: Cobb Salad
Special Drink: Chai Tea
"""
async def main():
agent = ChatAgent(
chat_client=OpenAIChatClient(),
instructions="You are a helpful assistant that can provide weather and restaurant information.",
tools=[get_weather, get_menu_specials]
)
response = await agent.run("What's the weather in Amsterdam and what are today's specials?")
print(response)
"""
Output:
The weather in Amsterdam is sunny with a high of 22°C. Today's specials include
Clam Chowder soup, Cobb Salad, and Chai Tea as the special drink.
"""
if __name__ == "__main__":
asyncio.run(main())
You can explore additional agent samples here.
5. Multi-Agent Orchestration
Coordinate multiple agents to collaborate on complex tasks using orchestration patterns:
import asyncio
from agent_framework import ChatAgent
from agent_framework.openai import OpenAIChatClient
async def main():
# Create specialized agents
writer = ChatAgent(
chat_client=OpenAIChatClient(),
name="Writer",
instructions="You are a creative content writer. Generate and refine slogans based on feedback."
)
reviewer = ChatAgent(
chat_client=OpenAIChatClient(),
name="Reviewer",
instructions="You are a critical reviewer. Provide detailed feedback on proposed slogans."
)
# Sequential workflow: Writer creates, Reviewer provides feedback
task = "Create a slogan for a new electric SUV that is affordable and fun to drive."
# Step 1: Writer creates initial slogan
initial_result = await writer.run(task)
print(f"Writer: {initial_result}")
# Step 2: Reviewer provides feedback
feedback_request = f"Please review this slogan: {initial_result}"
feedback = await reviewer.run(feedback_request)
print(f"Reviewer: {feedback}")
# Step 3: Writer refines based on feedback
refinement_request = f"Please refine this slogan based on the feedback: {initial_result}\nFeedback: {feedback}"
final_result = await writer.run(refinement_request)
print(f"Final Slogan: {final_result}")
# Example Output:
# Writer: "Charge Forward: Affordable Adventure Awaits!"
# Reviewer: "Good energy, but 'Charge Forward' is overused in EV marketing..."
# Final Slogan: "Power Up Your Adventure: Premium Feel, Smart Price!"
if __name__ == "__main__":
asyncio.run(main())
For more advanced orchestration patterns including Sequential, Concurrent, Group Chat, Handoff, and Magentic orchestrations, see the orchestration samples.
More Examples & Samples
- Getting Started with Agents: Basic agent creation and tool usage
- Chat Client Examples: Direct chat client usage patterns
- Azure AI Integration: Azure AI integration
- Workflow Samples: Advanced multi-agent patterns
Agent Framework Documentation
- Agent Framework Repository
- Python Package Documentation
- .NET Package Documentation
- Design Documents
- Learn docs are coming soon.