Files
agent-framework/python
T
Evan Mattson c4f643a750 Python: Fix walrus operator precedence for model_id kwarg in AzureOpenAIResponsesClient (#4310)
* Fix walrus operator precedence for model_id in AzureOpenAIResponsesClient (#4299)

Add parentheses around the walrus assignment so model_id receives the
actual string value instead of the boolean result of
`kwargs.pop(...) and not deployment_name`.

Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

* Address review: replace walrus with explicit None check, add edge-case tests (#4299)

- Replace walrus operator with explicit assignment and 'is not None'
  check to avoid boolean-coercion pitfalls (empty string now correctly
  surfaces as ValueError instead of silently falling back)
- Add test: deployment_name takes precedence over model_id kwarg
- Add test: model_id='' raises ValueError
- Add test: model_id=None falls back to env var

Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

* Add explicit validation for empty model_id in AzureOpenAIResponsesClient

Reject empty or whitespace-only model_id with ValueError instead of
silently passing an empty deployment name downstream. This ensures the
test_init_model_id_kwarg_empty_string test correctly validates behavior
defined in production code rather than relying on downstream validation.

Addresses PR review feedback for #4299.

Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

* Simplify model_id handling using walrus operator

Addresses review comment on PR #4310.

Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

* Restore explicit model_id validation to fix test failures (#4299)

The walrus operator refactor silently dropped the empty-string validation,
causing test_init_model_id_kwarg_empty_string to fail. Restore the explicit
None check and ValueError raise for empty model_id.

Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>

* Revert "Restore explicit model_id validation to fix test failures (#4299)"

This reverts commit 1d2965fff6.

* Revert to walrus operator fix per review feedback

---------

Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
c4f643a750 · 2026-03-02 14:06:58 +00:00
History
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2025-10-01 11:54:26 +00:00
2025-11-14 02:56:44 +00:00

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

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 Agent
from agent_framework.openai import OpenAIChatClient

async def main():
    agent = Agent(
        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 Message
from agent_framework.openai import OpenAIChatClient

async def main():
    client = OpenAIChatClient()

    messages = [
        Message("system", ["You are a helpful assistant."]),
        Message("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 Agent
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 = Agent(
        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 Agent
from agent_framework.openai import OpenAIChatClient


async def main():
    # Create specialized agents
    writer = Agent(
        client=OpenAIChatClient(),
        name="Writer",
        instructions="You are a creative content writer. Generate and refine slogans based on feedback."
    )

    reviewer = Agent(
        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

Agent Framework Documentation