qcradle is a command line tool to create repos based on a group of templates. It has been created to accelerate, simplify and harmonize the development of experiments and quantitative strategies as described here.
qcradle is a tool inspired by Cookiecutter, but more biased towards quants, researchers, and academics.
Whether you're building entire Python packages or financial models, running simulations, or writing academic papers, qcradle helps you hit the ground running with a structured and efficient setup following the most recent standards set in 2025.
We use uv, hatch, marimo and Tectonic. Supporting DevContainers, Renovate, and Dependabot, we take full advantage of GitHub Workflows.
Each template comes with curated pre-commit hooks. We compile Jupyter Books to collect test reports, API documentation, and notebooks.
Let’s make project setup as rigorous as your research!
Users can interact with qcradle by either creating templates or by using existing templates to create projects. We would be delighted to list your public work here:
We would like to encourage our users to point to public repositories created with the qcradle. We start with
- cvxball. We created badges for you
Please share your templates with the world!
Please install GitHub's official command line tool gh. This tool is used to create GitHub repos from the command line.
Verify the existence of the tool and a valid SSH connection with
ssh -T [email protected]
gh --version
A new SSH connection could be established here.
uv is a modern, high-performance Python package manager and installer written in Rust. It serves as a drop-in replacement for traditional tools like pip and pipx. For macOS and Linux:
curl -LsSf https://astral.sh/uv/install.sh | sh
For Windows follow the instructions here
uvx is a command provided by uv to run tools published as Python packages without installing them permanently. It creates temporary, isolated environments for these tools:
uvx qcradle
This command will:
- Resolve and install the qcradle package in a temporary environment.
- Execute the qcradle command.
Note: If you plan to use a tool frequently, consider installing it permanently using uv:
uv tool install qcradle
Once the tool is permanently installed it is enough to start it with
qcradle
You could create your own templates and standardize project structures across your team or organization. It's essentially a project scaffolding tool that helps maintain consistency in Python projects.
We currently offer
- The document template
- The experiments template
- The package template
- The R template
We follow the one template, one repository policy.
You are encouraged to create your own templates and we give
The template supports the fast creation of repositories of LaTeX documents. The repo can compile your LaTeX documents with every commit and put them on a dedicated branch.
Here we support the creation of notebooks without the ambition to release software. The repo is not minimalistic but comes with a curated set of pre-commit hooks and follows modern and established guidelines. The notebooks are based on Marimo.
The package template is most useful when the final goal is the release of software to a registry, e.g. pypi. It offers full uv support and compiles documentation into a Jupyter Book.
Here we expose R Studio in a devcontainer.
You can create your very own templates and we recommend to start with forking the dedicated repo for the job.
Templates rely on Jinja. At the root level the repo needs a 'copier.yml' file and a 'template' folder.
Each template is tested using act, e.g. we render the project template and test the workflows of the created project. This helps to avoid creating projects starting their life in a broken state.
We essentially expose the copier interface directly with minor modifications, e.g. if the user is not submitting a source template we offer to choose one of the standard templates.
Any cradle template could be used directly as the first 'template' argument
uvx qcradle [email protected]:tschm/paper.git
By default, Copier (and hence the repo-launcher) will copy from the last release found in template Git tags, sorted as PEP 440.
Templates are moving targets in most professional setups. It is possible to update projects created with the help of the qcradle by specifying an existing path instead of a template.
uvx qcradle --dst_path=/Users/thomasschmelzer/projects/my_marimo_experiments
The tool expects a full path. Your repo should contain your previous answers in a file '.copier-answers.yml' which serve as default arguments for the questions you have been asked before. All standard templates create the file.
Using workflows in private repos will eat into your monthly GitHub bill. You may want to restrict the workflow to operate only when merging on the main branch while operating on a different branch or deactivate the flow.