Changing default conda environment [duplicate] - python

I've installed Anaconda and created two extra environments: py3k (which holds Python 3.3) and py34 (which holds Python 3.4). Besides those, I have a default environment named 'root' which the Anaconda installer created by default and which holds Python 2.7. This last one is the default, whenever I launch 'ipython' from the terminal it gives me version 2.7. In order to work with Python 3.4, I need to issue the commands (in the shell)
source activate py34
ipython
which change the default environment to Python 3.4. This works fine, but it's annoying since most of the time I work on Python 3.4, instead of Python 2.7 (which I hold for teaching purposes, it's a rather long story). Anyway, I'll like to know how to change the default environment to Python 3.4, bearing in mind that I don't want to reinstall everything from scratch.

If you just want to temporarily change to another environment, use
source activate environment-name
ETA: This may be deprecated. I believe the current correct command is:
source conda activate environment-name
(you can create environment-name with conda create)
To change permanently, there is no method except creating a startup script that runs the above code.
Typically it's best to just create new environments. However, if you really want to change the Python version in the default environment, you can do so as follows:
First, make sure you have the latest version of conda by running
conda update conda
Then run
conda install python=3.5
This will attempt to update all your packages in your root environment to Python 3 versions. If it is not possible (e.g., because some package is not built for Python 3.5), it will give you an error message indicating which package(s) caused the issue.
If you installed packages with pip, you'll have to reinstall them.

Overview
Some people have multiple Conda environments with different versions of Python for compatibility reasons. In this case, you should activate the desired default environment in the shell initialization file (e.g., .bashrc, .zshrc). With this method, you can preserve the versions of Python you use in your environments.
The following assumes environment_name is the name of your environment
Mac / Linux:
Edit your bash profile so that the last line is conda activate environment_name. In Mac OSX this is ~/.bash_profile, in other environments this may be ~/.bashrc
Example:
Here's how I did it on Mac OSX
Open Terminal and type:
nano ~/.bash_profile
Go to end of file and type the following, where "p3.5" is my environment:
conda activate p3.5
Exit File. Start a new terminal window.
Type the following to see what environment is active
conda info -e
The result shows that I'm using my p3.5 environment by default.
For Windows:
Create a command file (.cmd) with activate environment_name and follow these instructions to have it execute whenever you open a command prompt
Create a batch file command, e.g. "my_conda.cmd", put it in the Application Data folder.
Configure it to be started automatically whenever you open cmd. This setting is in Registry:
key: HKCU\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Command Processor
value: AutoRun
type: REG_EXPAND_SZ
data: "%AppData%\my_conda.cmd"
from this answer: https://superuser.com/a/302553/143794

Under Linux there is an easier way to set the default environment by modifying ~/.bashrc or ~/.bash_profile
At the end you'll find something like
# added by Anaconda 2.1.0 installer
export PATH="~/anaconda/bin:$PATH"
Replace it with
# set python3 as default
export PATH="~/anaconda/envs/python3/bin:$PATH"
and thats all there is to it.

For windows Anaconda comes with Anaconda Prompt which is a shortcut to cmd and can be used run conda commands without adding anaconda in PATH variable.
Find the location of it, copy and rename the copy (say myenv_prompt). Right click myenv_prompt and select properties in the context menu.
The Target form of Properties window should already be filled with text, something like %windir%\system32\cmd.exe "/K" C:\Users\xxx\AppData\Local\Continuum\Miniconda3\Scripts\activate.bat C:\Users\xxx\AppData\Local\Continuum\Miniconda3\
There are three parts of this command 1)start ...\cmd.exe 2)run ...\acitvate.bat with environment 3)...\Miniconda3\
Change 3rd part to path of the environment (say myenv) you want as default i.e. fill the Target form something like %windir%\system32\cmd.exe "/K" C:\Users\xxx\AppData\Local\Continuum\Miniconda3\Scripts\activate.bat C:\Users\xxx\AppData\Local\Continuum\Miniconda3\envs\myenv
Now myenv_prompt will act as shortcut to start cmd with myenv as the default environment for python. This shortcut you can keep in start menu or pinned in taskbar.
One advantage of this method is that you can create a few shortcuts each having different environment as default environment. Also you can set the default folder by filling Start in form of the Properties window
Hope this helps
PS:It is not required to find Anaconda Prompt and can be done by changing target of any shortcut. But you will require to know path of cmd.exe and activate.bat

Just activate your py34 environment when you load your terminal/shell.
If you use Bash, put the line:
conda activate py34
in your .bash_profile (or .bashrc):
$ echo 'conda activate py34' >> ~/.bash_profile
Every time you run a new terminal, conda environment py34 will be loaded.

The correct answer (as of Dec 2018) is... you can't. Upgrading conda install python=3.6 may work, but it might not if you have packages that are necessary, but cannot be uninstalled.
Anaconda uses a default environment named base and you cannot create a new (e.g. python 3.6) environment with the same name. This is intentional. If you want your base Anaconda to be python 3.6, the right way to do this is to install Anaconda for python 3.6. As a package manager, the goal of Anaconda is to make different environments encapsulated, hence why you must source activate into them and why you can't just quietly switch the base package at will as this could lead to many issues on production systems.

Change permanent
conda install python={version}
Change Temporarily
View your environments
run conda info --envs on your terminal window or an Anconda Prompt
If It doesn't show environment that you want to install
run conda create -n py36 python=3.6 anaconda for python 3.6 change version as your prefer
Activating an environment (use Anaconda prompt)
run activate envnme envnme you can find by this commandconda info --envs as a example when you run conda info --envs it show
base * C:\Users\DulangaHeshan\Anaconda3
py36 C:\Users\DulangaHeshan\Anaconda3\envs\py36
then run activate py36
to check run python --version
In Windows, it is good practice to deactivate one environment before activating another.
https://docs.conda.io/projects/conda/en/latest/user-guide/tasks/manage-environments.html?highlight=deactivate%20environment

If you want Anaconda Navigator to default to Virtual Env you created, go to file > Preference and select default conda env in drop down lint:
If you want Anaconda command automatically opens to virtual env without having to type activate envName, do this:
Right click on conda shortcut > go to properties and change the Target to something like this:
%windir%\System32\cmd.exe "/K" C:\Anaconda\Scripts\activate.bat C:\Anaconda\envs\p37
Optionally you can set your default working dir as well, like I did in snapshop below:
gl

On Windows, create a batch file with the following line in it:
start cmd /k "C:\Anaconda3\Scripts\activate.bat C:\Anaconda3 & activate env"
The first path contained in quotes is the path to the activate.bat file in the Anaconda installation. The path on your system might be different. The name following the activate command of course should be your desired environment name.
Then run the batch file when you need to open an Anaconda prompt.

Here is the solution I found for autoactivating my preferred environment on a Windows 10 system:
Open anaconda prompt & use 'conda env list' to find the location of the environment you wish to use.
Go to the start menu, right-click 'Anaconda Prompt' and go to file location.
Create a copy of this shortcut file
Open its properties & change the target to the location of your preferred environment.
Now every time you open anaconda prompt through this shortcut it will automatically load your chosen environment.

activate.py is hardcoded to emit conda activate base\n into your shell profile when you evaluate the shell hook produced by conda shell.zsh hook.
you can suppress this hardcoded "auto-activate base" via:
conda config --set auto_activate_base false
then, in ~/.zshrc, ~/.bashrc or wherever you source your shell profile from, you can append the following (after the conda shell hook) to explicitly activate the environment of your choosing:
conda activate py34

I wasn't satisfied with any of the answers presented here, since activating an environment takes a few seconds on my platform (for whatever reason)
I modified my path variable so that the environment I want as default has priority over the actual default.
In my case I used the following commands to accomplish that for the environment "py35":
setx PATH "%userprofile%\Anaconda3\envs\py35\;%PATH%"
setx PATH "%userprofile%\Anaconda3\envs\py35\Scripts;%PATH%"
to find out where your environment is stored, activate it and enter where python.
I'm not sure yet if this approach has any downsides. Since it also changes the default path of the conda executable. If that should be the case, please comment.

For Jupyter and Windows users, you can change the Target path in your Jupyter Notebook (anaconda3) shortcut from C:\Users\<YourUserName>\anaconda3 to C:\Users\<YourUserName>\anaconda3\envs\<YourEnvironmentName>
you could do the same thing for the Anaconda Prompt..etc.
After changing the path you can check your active environment by opening a terminal in Jupyter and run conda info --envs.

I got this when installing a library using anaconda. My version went from Python 3.* to 2.7 and a lot of my stuff stopped working.
The best solution I found was to first see the most recent version available:
conda search python
Then update to the version you want:
conda install python=3.*.*
Source: http://chris35wills.github.io/conda_python_version/
Other helpful commands:
conda info
python --version

Create a shortcut of anaconda prompt onto desktop or taskbar, and then in the properties of that shortcut make sure u modify the last path in "Target:" to the path of ur environment:
C:\Users\BenBouali\Anaconda3\ WILL CHANGE INTO
C:\Users\BenBouali\Anaconda3\envs\tensorflow-gpu
preview
and this way u can use that shortcut to open a certain environment when clicking it, you can add it to ur path too and now you'll be able to run it from windows run box by just typing in the name of the shortcut.

Tried both source activate default_3_9 and source conda activate default_3_9
but worked conda activate default_3_9

I'm trying to update Anaconda in order to use Python 3.10.4 and then Spyder 5.3.2. Actually, I wanted to set the Python interpreter used by Pycharm inside the Spyder console but it required the newest Spyder version. I didn't try all the possible solutions (it's pending for me to use the window batch and modifying path solutions given here) but:
Since I couldn't update the Anaconda base due to the well-known error on the "Solving environment". Then Python and Spyder remain the same.
Creating a new env allows to get the last Python and then his newest Spyder version but it doesn't actualize the Anaconda shortcuts and even the Anaconda navigator if you set it to this new env still has some inconsistencies like keeping the older Spyder version in his menu.
Besides, on point 2, changing the shortcuts target path doesn't work for me.
Finally, I create a new shortcut of the Spyder file from the Scripts folder inside the environment directory ( C:\Users<userName>>\Anaconda3\envs<EnvName>\Scripts )
I couldn't use the default Anaconda shortcuts but I have what I wanted and quick access.

Related

Conda environment not showing up in VS Code

I installed miniconda on Windows 10 and created an environment (I followed this guide: https://www.notion.so/shashankkalanithi/Setting-Up-Conda-Environment-ba83f7f019ea44b9af37588eed419eb9). However when I open the VS Code I don't see that environment python interpeter on kernel list. There is only one interpreter on the list: ~\Miniconda3\python.exe
How can I fix this?
in vscode press ctrl+shift+p and type python:Select Interpreter you should see all the environment there. If it does not appear create a .py file and try again. also you can press the reload icon on the search bar where you typed python:select interpreter.
You can try to follow methods from
vscode - Create a conda environment
Additional notes:
...To ensure the environment is set up well from a shell perspective, one
option is to use an Anaconda prompt with the activated environment to
launch VS Code using the code . command. At that point you just need
to select the interpreter using the Command Palette or by clicking on
the status bar.
Firstly you need to create an environment with python in it otherwise it won't recognize it. Create an environment like this first
conda create --name tf26 python==3.10
Use your preferred name and python version here thereafter restart VS Code. You will definitely see your env.
Note:
You can delete any unused env if want like this
conda env remove --name <env_name>
I wanted to use the new environment as a Jupyter kernel and had to install the jupyter package for it to show up in the kernel selection of VSCode. You can install it by running conda install jupyter.
I finally resolved the problem.
This thread says that you need to create the conda environment passing the python argument:
conda create -n your_env_name python=3.7
Doing this the environment appears in the Select interpreter to start Jupyter server options.
The extension automatically looks for interpreters in the following locations:
Conda environments that contain a Python interpreter. VS Code does not
show conda environments that don't contain an interpreter.
After you create a conda environment, you need to activate it and install some packages in order to get the python interpreter. And remember to reload the VSCode. If it still does not exist, you can try to choose Enter interpreter path, to point the path manually.
In your project .vscode/settings.json file, just replace the old python.pythonPath setting with the new one (or add if non-existing) python.defaultInterpreterPath and it will work. The value for the setting is the path to the venv you're using in your project.
Afterward, Ctrl+Shift+P via Python: Select Interpreter will allow you to choose a different interpreter.
I had the same problem.
After I opened Anaconda Prompt as Administrator and created the environment, I saw it in VS code
Open “Anaconda Prompt” from the Windows start button as
“Administrator.”
The reason why vscode doesn't show the environment is that it doesn't have a python interpreter in it because of inheriting or something.
The solution is also simple. Just manually install python in that environment.
conda install python

PyCharm not detecting anaconda3 environments

I have installed anaconda3, and created some environments from the command line:
(base) ➜ ~ conda env list
# conda environments:
#
scratchpad /Users/adamg/.conda/envs/scratchpad
test /Users/adamg/.conda/envs/test
base * /Users/adamg/anaconda3
convokit /Users/adamg/anaconda3/envs/convokit
scholar /Users/adamg/anaconda3/envs/scholar
swda /Users/adamg/anaconda3/envs/swda
However, in PyCharm, none of these environments show up. In addition, as seen below, on the screen "Add Python Interpreter" there is a message at the bottom that says "Conda executable not found". I've tried to find solutions using that error message, but have not come up with anything.
What am I missing here?
I am running PyCharm Professional 2019.2, and MacOS 10.15.
You need to define the Python path.
Activate into the desired environment source activate swda, Run which python from to locate the Python path that is under Anaconda, and then press the three dots ... right to the "interpreter" and paste the python path.
Or simply look for the Python executable through the UI and add it as the interpreter.
If you have an invalid Conda environment, you need to delete it and the one missing will show in the list.
Sometimes Pycharm does not show the existing conda environments. In that case, just point to the python path of the existing conda environment through venv and it will recognize it as a conda env.

Activating a Conda Enviroment in Pycharm

Probably an extremely trivial question. I created an environment in conda and now want to run a script in pycharm. what is the command line to activate said conda environment so that I can use work in it on pycharm?
By default, the command is source activate your_env_name
On Windows, it should be conda activate your_env_name instead
Step1: First know the path of python and conda that you want to use. If you don't know, you can get the path(s) on windows command prompt by:
>where conda
>where python
Step2: Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open the project Settings/Preferences and go to Project | Python Interpreter. Then click the gear icon and select Add.
In the left-hand pane of the Add Python Interpreter dialog, select Conda Environment.
Select Existing environment
Click Select an interpreter and specify a paths to python and Conda executable (the paths you obtained in Step1).

Conda command is not recognized on Windows 10

I installed Anaconda 4.4.0 (Python 3.6 version) on Windows 10 by following the instructions here: https://www.continuum.io/downloads. However, when I open the Command prompt window and try to write
conda list
I get the
'conda' command is not recognized...
error.
I tried to run
set PATH=%PATH%;C:\Users\Alex\Anaconda3
but it didn't help. I also read that I might need to edit my .bashrc file, but I don't know how to access this file, and how I should edit it.
In Windows, you will have to set the path to the location where you installed Anaconda3 to.
For me, I installed anaconda3 into C:\Anaconda3. Therefore you need to add C:\Anaconda3 as well as C:\Anaconda3\Scripts\ to your path variable, e.g. set PATH=%PATH%;C:\Anaconda3;C:\Anaconda3\Scripts\.
You can do this via powershell (see above, https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/bb776899(v=vs.85).aspx ), or hit the windows key → enter environment → choose from settings → edit environment variables for your account → select Path variable → Edit → New.
To test it, open a new dos shell, and you should be able to use conda commands now. E.g., try conda --version.
Things have been changed after conda 4.6.
Programs "Anaconda Prompt" and "Anaconda Powershell" expose the command conda for you automatically. Find them in your startup menu.
If you don't wanna use the prompts above and try to make conda available in a standard cmd.exe or a standard Powershell. Read the following content.
Expose conda in Every Shell
The purpose of the following content is to make command conda available both in cmd.exe and Powershell on Windows.
If you have already checked "Add Anaconda to my PATH environment variable" during Anaconda installation, skip step 1.
If Anaconda is installed for the current use only, add %USERPROFILE%\Anaconda3\condabin (I mean condabin, not Scripts) into the environment variable PATH (the user one). If Anaconda is installed for all users on your machine, add C:\ProgramData\Anaconda3\condabin into PATH.
How do I set system environment variables on Windows?
Open a new Powershell, run the following command once to initialize conda.
conda init
These steps make sure the conda command is exposed into your cmd.exe and Powershell.
Extended Reading: conda init from Conda 4.6
Caveat: Add the new \path\to\anaconda3\condabin but not \path\to\anaconda3\Scripts into your PATH. This is a big change introduced in conda 4.6.
Activation script initialization fron conda 4.6 release log
Conda 4.6 adds extensive initialization support so that more shells than ever before can use the new conda activate command. For more information, read the output from conda init –help We’re especially excited about this new way of working, because removing the need to modify PATH makes Conda much less disruptive to other software on your system.
In the old days, \path\to\anaconda3\Scripts is the one to be put into your PATH. It exposes command conda and the default Python from "base" environment at the same time.
After conda 4.6, conda related commands are separated into condabin. This makes it possible to expose ONLY command conda without activating the Python from "base" environment.
References
Conda 4.6 Release
How do I prevent Conda from activating the base environment?
When you install anaconda on windows now, it doesn't automatically add Python or Conda.
If you don’t know where your conda and/or python is, you type the following commands into your anaconda prompt
Next, you can add Python and Conda to your path by using the setx command in your command prompt.
Next close that command prompt and open a new one. Congrats you can now use conda and python
Source: https://medium.com/#GalarnykMichael/install-python-on-windows-anaconda-c63c7c3d1444
The newest version of the Anaconda installer for Windows will also install a windows launcher for "Anaconda Prompt" and "Anaconda Powershell Prompt". If you use one of those instead of the regular windows cmd shell, the conda command, python etc. should be available by default in this shell.
If you want to use Anaconda in regular cmd on windows you need to add several paths to your Path env variable.
Those paths are (instead of Anaconda3 the folder may be Anaconda2 depending on the Anaconda version on your PC):
\Users\YOUR_USER\Anaconda3
\Users\YOUR_USER\Anaconda3\Library\mingw-w64\bin
\Users\YOUR_USER\Anaconda3\Library\usr\bin
\Users\YOUR_USER\Anaconda3\Library\bin
\Users\YOUR_USER\Anaconda3\Scripts
\Users\YOUR_USER\Anaconda3\bin
I had also faced the same problem just an hour back. I was trying to install QuTip Quantum Toolbox in Python
Unfortunately, I didn't stumble onto this page in time.
Say you have downloaded Anaconda installer and run it until the end.
Naively, I opened the command prompt in windows 10 and proceded to type the following commands as given in the qutip installation docs.
conda create -n qutip-env
conda config --append channels conda-forge
conda install qutip
But as soon as I typed the first line I got the following response
conda is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file
error messsage
I went ahead and tried some other things as seen in this figures
error message
Finally after going through a number conda websites, I understood how one fixes this problem.
Type Anaconda prompt in the search bar at the bottom like this (same place where you hail Cortana)
Anaconda prompt
Once you are here all the conda commands will work as usual
If you have installed Visual studio 2017 (profressional)
The install location:
C:\ProgramData\Anaconda3\Scripts
If you do not want the hassle of putting this in your path environment variable on windows and restarting you can run it by simply:
C:\>"C:\ProgramData\Anaconda3\Scripts\conda.exe" update qt pyqt
You need to add the python.exe in C://.../Anaconda3 installation file as well as C://.../Anaconda3/Scripts to PATH.
First go to your installation directory, in my case it is installed in C://Users/user/Anaconda3 and shift+right click and press "Open command window here" or it might be "Open powershell here", if it is powershell, just write cmd and hit enter to run command window. Then run the following command setx PATH %cd%
Then go to C://Users/user/Anaconda3/Scripts and open the command window there as above, then run the same command "setx PATH %cd%"
To prevent having further issues with SSL you should add all those to Path :
SETX PATH "%PATH%;C:\<path>\Anaconda3;C:\<path>\Anaconda3\Scripts;C:\<path>\Anaconda3\Library\bin"
Requests (Caused by SSLError("Can't connect to HTTPS URL because the SSL module is not available.") Error in PyCharm requesting website
case #1
You should set 3 path:
%ANACONDAPATH%;
%ANACONDAPATH%\Scripts;
%ANACONDAPATH%\Library\bin;
It will solve problem:
C:\WINDOWS\system32>conda update conda
Solving environment: failed
CondaHTTPError: HTTP 000 CONNECTION FAILED for url <https://repo.anaconda.com/pkgs/msys2/noarch/repodata.json.bz2>
Elapsed: -
...
case #2
Also you can use Anaconda Promd (for Win10) instead CLI (cmd.exe)
According to the official documentation, for Windows users there are two environment variable PATHs which can be updated, depending on how your Miniconda/Anaconda distribution has been installed -- one is the SYSTEM PATH, the other is the USER PATH: https://docs.conda.io/projects/conda/en/master/user-guide/tasks/manage-environments.html#activating-an-environment
Basically it says the following: If like the official recommendation you have installed conda for yourself on the user level only, you can add a path similar to C:\Users\<user-name>\miniconda3\Scripts to the user variables.
Please remember to change to Anaconda if you are not using miniconda and update the to your system username in order for this to work.
However, if you have a system level install for all users on the same machine, you should add the path c:\miniconda3\Scripts\ to the system variables.
Also, please run conda init in your PowerShell to have conda working on your PowerShell. If there is a Python version already installed on your PC, you can disable "app execution aliases" in Settings (under "Manage app execution aliases") for this to use only the Python ones on the command line to avoid conflict.
Even I got the same problem when I've first installed Anaconda. It said 'conda' command not found.
So I've just setup two values[added two new paths of Anaconda] system environment variables in the PATH variable which are: C:\Users\mshas\Anaconda2\ & C:\Users\mshas\Anaconda2\Scripts
Lot of people forgot to add the second variable which is "Scripts" just add that then conda command works.

'Conda' is not recognized as internal or external command

I installed Anaconda3 4.4.0 (32 bit) on my Windows 7 Professional machine and imported NumPy and Pandas on Jupyter notebook so I assume Python was installed correctly. But when I type conda list and conda --version in command prompt, it says conda is not recognized as internal or external command.
I have set environment variable for Anaconda3; Variable Name: Path, Variable Value: C:\Users\dipanwita.neogy\Anaconda3
How do I make it work?
I was faced with the same issue in windows 10, Updating the environment variable following steps, it's working fine.
I know It is a lengthy answer for the simple environment setups, I thought it's may be useful for the new window 10 users.
1) Open Anaconda Prompt:
2) Check Conda Installed Location.
where conda
3) Open Advanced System Settings
4) Click on Environment Variables
5) Edit Path
6) Add New Path
C:\Users\RajaRama\Anaconda3\Scripts
C:\Users\RajaRama\Anaconda3
C:\Users\RajaRama\Anaconda3\Library\bin
7) Open Command Prompt and Check Versions
8) After 7th step type
conda install anaconda-navigator in cmd then press y
Although you were offered a good solution by others I think it is helpful to point out what is really happening. As per the Anaconda 4.4 changelog, https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/reference/release-notes/#what-s-new-in-anaconda-4-4:
On Windows, the PATH environment variable is no longer changed by default, as this can cause trouble with other software. The recommended approach is to instead use Anaconda Navigator or the Anaconda Command Prompt (located in the Start Menu under “Anaconda”) when you wish to use Anaconda software.
(Note: recent Win 10 does not assume you have privileges to install or update. If the command fails, right-click on the Anaconda Command Prompt, choose "More", chose "Run as administrator")
This is a change from previous installations. It is suggested to use Navigator or the Anaconda Prompt although you can always add it to your PATH as well. During the install the box to add Anaconda to the PATH is now unchecked but you can select it.
I found the solution.
Variable value should be C:\Users\dipanwita.neogy\Anaconda3\Scripts
When you install anaconda on windows now, it doesn't automatically add Python or Conda to your path.
While during the installation process you can check this box, you can also add python and/or python to your path manually (as you can see below the image)
If you don’t know where your conda and/or python is, you type the following commands into your anaconda prompt
where python
where conda
Next, you can add Python and Conda to your path by using the setx command in your command prompt (replace C:\Users\mgalarnyk\Anaconda2 with the results you got when running where python and where conda).
SETX PATH "%PATH%;C:\Users\mgalarnyk\Anaconda2\Scripts;C:\Users\mgalarnyk\Anaconda2"
Next close that command prompt and open a new one. Congrats you can now use conda and python
Source: https://medium.com/#GalarnykMichael/install-python-on-windows-anaconda-c63c7c3d1444
Just to be clear, you need to go to the controlpanel\System\Advanced system settings\Environment Variables\Path,
then hit edit and add:
C:Users\user.user\Anaconda3\Scripts
to the end and restart the cmd line
In addition to adding C:\Users\yourusername\Anaconda3 and C:\Users\yourusername\Anaconda3\Scripts, as recommended by Raja (above), also add C:\Users\yourusername\Anaconda3\Library\bin to your path variable. This will prevent an SSL error that is bound to happen if you're performing this on a fresh install of Anaconda.
If you have a newer version of the Anaconda Navigator, open the Anaconda Prompt program that came in the install. Type all the usual conda update/conda install commands there.
I think the answers above explain this, but I could have used a very simple instruction like this. Perhaps it will help others.
Go To anaconda prompt(type "anaconda" in search box in your laptop). type following commands
where conda
add that location to your environment path variables. Close the cmd and open it again
This problem arose for me when I installed Anaconda multiple times. I was careful to do an uninstall but there are some things that the uninstall process doesn't undo.
In my case, I needed to remove a file Microsoft.PowerShell_profile.ps1 from ~\Documents\WindowsPowerShell\. I identified that this file was the culprit by opening it in a text editor. I saw that it referenced the old installation location C:\Anaconda3\.
For conda --version greater than 4.6, from the base of your Anaconda promt, run
conda update conda
conda init
This will update your conda root environment and setup the stuff you need to run it on both cwd and powershell.
After this, you can start any terminal and it will be conda ready.
If you don't want to add Anaconda to env. path and you are using Windows try this:
Open cmd;
Type path to your folder instalation. It's something like:
C:\Users\your_home folder\Anaconda3\Scripts
Test Anaconda, for exemple type conda --version.
Update Anaconda: conda update conda or conda update --all or conda update anaconda.
Update Spyder:
conda update qt pyqt
conda update spyder
I have Windows 10 64 bit, this worked for me,
This solution can work for both (Anaconda/MiniConda) distributions.
First of all try to uninstall anaconda/miniconda which is causing problem.
After that delete '.anaconda' and '.conda' folders from 'C:\Users\'
If you have any antivirus software installed then try to exclude all the folders,subfolders inside 'C:\ProgramData\Anaconda3\' from
Behaviour detection.
Virus detection.
DNA scan.
Suspicious files scan.
Any other virus protection mode.
*(Note: 'C:\ProgramData\Anaconda3' this folder is default installation folder, you can change it just replace your excluded path at installation destination prompt while installing Anaconda)*
Now install Anaconda with admin privileges.
Set the installation path as 'C:\ProgramData\Anaconda3' or you can specify your custom path just remember it should not contain any white space and it should be excluded from virus detection.
At Advanced Installation Options you can check "Add Anaconda to my PATH environment variable(optional)" and "Register Anaconda as my default Python 3.6"
Install it with further default settings. Click on finish after done.
Restart your computer.
Now open Command prompt or Anaconda prompt and check installation using following command
conda list
If you get any package list then the anaconda/miniconda is successfully installed.
I have just launched anaconda-navigator and run the conda commands from there.
For those who didn't check "Add Anaconda to my PATH environment variable". In Windows 10 it looks like that:
5 paths:
C:\Users\shtosh\anaconda3
C:\Users\shtosh\anaconda3\Library\mingw-w64\bin
C:\Users\shtosh\anaconda3\Library\usr\bin
C:\Users\shtosh\anaconda3\Library\bin
C:\Users\shtosh\anaconda3\Scripts
if you use chocolatey, conda is in C:\tools\Anaconda3\Scripts
I had this problem in windows. Most of the answers are not as recommended by anaconda, you should not add the path to the environment variables as it can break other things. Instead you should use anaconda prompt as mentioned in the top answer.
However, this may also break. In this case right click on the shortcut, go to shortcut tab, and the target value should read something like:
%windir%\System32\cmd.exe "/K" C:\Users\myUser\Anaconda3\Scripts\activate.bat C:\Users\myUser\Anaconda3

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