I'm running Linux Mint 21.1, and I'm trying to set the Python 3.11.1 interpreter as default. The problem is that I simply cannot get the command "python3" to point to my Python 3.11.1 installation.
3.11.1 is installed and fully functional in the same "/usr/lib/" directory as Python 2.7 and Python 3.10.6. I just want 3.11.1 to be the MAIN Python that is used systemwide.
I have:
Added Python 2.7, 3.10.6, and 3.11.1 to a group called "python" with update-alternatives and have set 3.11.1 as the default,
Changed the alias of the "python3" command to point to "/usr/lib/python3.11", only to find that it just echoes the directory and doesn't run the python 3.11 executable (or whatever it is called in linux),
Added the location of the Python 3.11.1 directory to the PATH variable.
In this process, I somehow got the command "python3.11" to start an instance of the 3.11.1 interpreter, while "python3" does the same in 3.10.6. I have no idea how or why this is happening.
None of the things I have done have worked towards my desired end. I just want "python3" to run Python 3.11.1 instead of 3.10.6, and I want this to be reflected systemwide (i.e. in VSCode, terminal, when running a file, etc.). I can't imagine I'm the first person to have this issue, so my question is how do I ensure that 3.11.1 is the default Python version on my system?
conda will not yet allow (succeed) to create an environment with python 3.11.1 or 3.11 because there is no package available yet for this version. See issue issue or PR
on my mint21 machine, python3 is a symbolic link in /usr/bin/ pointing to /usr/bin/pyton3.10 (you can check this via readlink -f python3 within the directory which is provided by which python3)
personally, I wouldn't change it - but I assume you could, if you update the link via sudo ln -vfs python3 <path/to/python3.11.1/binary> (verbose, force, symbolic - details see man ln)
If your prev. attempt "just echoes the directory and doesn't run the python 3.11 executable", I assume that you're not pointing to the binary of python3.11.1 (you can validate this via file <path/to/python3.11.1/you/used/for/the/change>- the output should mention "executable")
I do not know if mint will have a problem if you do this change. Please consider that the shipped distribution is tested and you're about to change defaults.
I have a working Python project on my PC, which I am running from Pycharm.
It uses Pyroot (an interface to Root C++ library), whose C++ lib path I have added in Project Settings/Python Interpreter/Paths in Pycharm. It also needs to use the 2.7 Python interpreter, instead of 3., which is a default python in my terminal.
I want to run this project remotely on another desktop, so I need to be able to run it from terminal specifying the path to Root and the interpreter version.
Is there a way to easily extract from Pycharm the exact run command it is using when I'm running the code via run button?
Alternatively, if that's impossible, how should I specify the path to Root and the interpreter version when running from terminal?
I guess to best way is to create a virtualenv either in the terminal or in pycharm including the corrext python version 2.7 and install pyroot via pip into this virtualenv. Then you can simply ssh in the remote host, activate the venv and start your project from the terminal. Or you ssh into it with X-forwarding and start Pycharm itself from your client.
If you select the correct project and go to File > Settings, under the Project Settings you can see the Project Interpreter which tells you which interpreter is being used.
Hope this is what you are looking for.
I do most of my programming in Python 3.x on Windows 7, but now I need to use the Python Imaging Library (PIL), ImageMagick, and wxPython, all of which require Python 2.x.
Can I have both Python 2.x and Python 3.x installed in Windows 7? When I run a script, how would I "choose" which version of Python should run it? Will the aforementioned programs be able to handle multiple versions of Python installed at once? I have searched for hours and hours for how to do this to no avail.
Thanks.
I found that the formal way to do this is as follows:
Just install two (or more, using their installers) versions of Python on Windows 7 (for me work with 3.3 and 2.7).
Follow the instuctions below, changing the parameters for your needs.
Create the following environment variable (to default on double click):
Name: PY_PYTHON
Value: 3
To launch a script in a particular interpreter, add the following shebang (beginning of script):
#! python2
To execute a script using a specific interpreter, use the following prompt command:
> py -2 MyScript.py
To launch a specific interpreter:
> py -2
To launch the default interpreter (defined by the PY_PYTHON variable):
> py
Resources
Documentation: Using Python on Windows
PEP 397 - Python launcher for Windows
What I did was download both 2.7.6 and 3.3.4. Python 3.3.4 has the option to add the path to it in the environment variable so that was done. So basically I just manually added Python 2.7.6.
How to...
Start > in the search type in environment select "Edit environment variables to your account"1
Scroll down to Path, select path, click edit.
Add C:\Python27;
so you should have paths to both versions of Python there, but if you don't this you can easily edit it so that you do..... C:\Python27;C:\Python33;
Navigate to the Python27 folder in C:\ and rename a copy of python.exe to python2.exe
Navigate to the Python34 folder in C:\ and rename a copy of python.exe to python3.exe
Test: open up commmand prompt and type python2 ....BOOM! Python 2.7.6. exit out.
Test: open up commmand prompt and type python3 ....BOOM! Python 3.4.3. exit out.
Note: (so as not to break pip commands in step 4 and 5, keep copy of python.exe in the same directory as the renamed file)
I have multiple versions in windows.
I just change the exe name of the version I'm not defaulting to.
python.exe --> python26.exe
pythonw.exe --> pythonw26.exe
As for package installers, most exe installers allow you to choose the python install to add the package too.
For manual installation check out the --prefix option to define where the package should be installed:
http://docs.python.org/install/index.html#alternate-installation-windows-the-prefix-scheme
If you use Anaconda Python, you can easily install various environments.
Say you had Anaconda Python 2.7 installed and you wanted a python 3.4 environment:
conda create -n py34 python=3.4 anaconda
Then to activate the environment:
activate py34
And to deactive:
deactivate py34
(With Linux, you should use source activate py34.)
Links:
Download Anaconda Python
Instructions for environments
To install and run any version of Python in the same system follow my guide below.
For example say you want to install Python 2.x and Python 3.x on the same Windows system.
Install both of their binary releases anywhere you want.
When prompted do not register their file extensions and
do not add them automatically to the PATH environment variable
Running simply the command python the executable that is first met in PATH will be chosen for launch. In other words, add the Python directories manually. The one you add first will be selected when you type python. Consecutive python programs (increasing order that their directories are placed in PATH) will be chosen like so:
py -2 for the second python
py -3 for the third python etc..
No matter the order of "pythons" you can:
run Python 2.x scripts using the command: py -2 (Python 3.x functionality) (ie. the first Python 2.x installation program found in your PATH will be selected)
run Python 3.x scripts using the command: or py -3 (ie. the first Python 3.x installation program found in your PATH will be selected)
In my example I have Python 2.7.14 installed first and Python 3.5.3. This is how my PATH variable starts with:
PATH=C:\Program Files\Microsoft MPI\Bin\;C:\Python27;C:\Program Files\Python_3.6\Scripts\;C:\Program Files\Python_3.6\;C:\ProgramData\Oracle\Java\javapath;C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Intel\Shared
...
Note that Python 2.7 is first and Python 3.5 second.
So running python command will launch python 2.7 (if Python 3.5 the same command would launch Python 3.5).
Running py -2 launches Python 2.7 (because it happens that the second Python is Python 3.5 which is incompatible with py -2).
Running py -3 launches Python 3.5 (because it's Python 3.x)
If you had another python later in your path you would launch like so: py -4. This may change if/when Python version 4 is released.
Now py -4 or py -5 etc. on my system outputs: Requested Python version (4) not installed or Requested Python version (5) not installed etc.
Hopefully this is clear enough.
Here's what you can do:
Install cmder.
Open and use Cmder as you would with you cmd terminal.
Use the command alias to create command aliases.
I did the following:
alias python2 = c:\python27\python.exe
alias python3 = c:\python34\python.exe
And that's it! ;-)
I actually just thought of an interesting solution. While Windows will not allow you to easily alias programs, you can instead create renamed batch files that will call the current program.
Instead of renaming the executable which will break a lot of thing including pip, create the file python2.bat in the same directory as the python2.exe. Then add the following line:
%~dp0python %*
What does this archaic syntax mean? Well, it's a batch script, (Windows version of bash). %~dp0 gets the current directory and %* will just pass all the arguments to python that were passed to the script.
Repeat for python3.bat
You can also do the same for pip and other utilities, just replace the word python in the file with pip or whathever the filename. The alias will be whatever the file is named.
Best of all, when added to the PATH, Windows ignores the extension so running
python3
Will launch the python3 version and and the command python2 will launch the python2 version.
BTW, this is the same technique Spyder uses to add itself to the path on Windows. :)
Starting version 3.3 Windows version has Python launcher, please take a look at section 3.4. Python Launcher for Windows
You can install multiple versions of Python one machine, and during setup, you can choose to have one of them associate itself with Python file extensions. If you install modules, there will be different setup packages for different versions, or you can choose which version you want to target. Since they generally install themselves into the site-packages directory of the interpreter version, there shouldn't be any conflicts (but I haven't tested this). To choose which version of python, you would have to manually specify the path to the interpreter if it is not the default one. As far as I know, they would share the same PATH and PYTHONPATH variables, which may be a problem.
Note: I run Windows XP. I have no idea if any of this changes for other versions, but I don't see any reason that it would.
What I have done on my own windows computer where I have Python 2.7 and Python 3.4 installed is I wrote a simple .bat file in the same directory as my Python.exe files. They look something like,
cmd /k "c:\python27\python.exe" %*
The %* allows you to add arguments (Python files) afterwards. I believe /k keeps the prompt open after it finishes running the script. Then I save that as python27.bat Then I go to my Python 3 directory and make a bat file there. Now in my command line I can write
Python27 helloworld.py
Or
Python34 helloworld.py
And they will run in their respective versions of Python. Make sure that c:\python27 and c:\python34 are in your environment variables.
I got my answer from here
I did this in three steps by following the instructions here: This is all taken directly from here: http://ipython.readthedocs.io/en/stable/install/kernel_install.html. I'm currently running Python 2.x on Windows 8 and have Anaconda 4.2.13 installed.
1) First install the latest version of python:
conda create -n python3 python=3 ipykernel
2) Next activate python3
activate python3
3) Install the kernel:
python -m ipykernel install --user
If you have Python 3 installed and want to install 2, switch the 2 and the 3 above. When you open a new notebook, you can now choose between Python 2 or 3.
Check your system environment variables after installing Python, python 3's directories should be first in your PATH variable, then python 2.
Whichever path variable matches first is the one Windows uses.
As always py -2 will launch python2 in this scenario.
I have encountered that problem myself and I made my launchers in a .bat so you could choose the version you want to launch.
The only problem is your .py must be in the python folder, but anyway here is the code:
For Python2
#echo off
title Python2 Launcher by KinDa
cls
echo Type the exact version of Python you use (eg. 23, 24, 25, 26)
set/p version=
cls
echo Type the file you want to launch without .py (eg. hello world, calculator)
set/p launch=
path = %PATH%;C:\Python%version%
cd C:\Python%version%
python %launch%.py
pause
For Python3
#echo off
title Python3 Launcher by KinDa
cls
echo Type the exact version of Python you use (eg. 31, 32, 33, 34)
set/p version=
cls
echo Type the file you want to launch without .py (eg. hello world, calculator)
set/p launch=
cls
set path = %PATH%:C:\Python%version%
cd C:\Python%version%
python %launch%.py
pause
Save them as .bat and follow the instructions inside.
Install the one you use most (3.3 in my case) over the top of the other. That'll force IDLE to use the one you want.
Alternatively (from the python3.3 README):
Installing multiple versions
On Unix and Mac systems if you intend to install multiple versions of Python
using the same installation prefix (--prefix argument to the configure script)
you must take care that your primary python executable is not overwritten by the
installation of a different version. All files and directories installed using
"make altinstall" contain the major and minor version and can thus live
side-by-side. "make install" also creates ${prefix}/bin/python3 which refers to
${prefix}/bin/pythonX.Y. If you intend to install multiple versions using the
same prefix you must decide which version (if any) is your "primary" version.
Install that version using "make install". Install all other versions using
"make altinstall".
For example, if you want to install Python 2.6, 2.7 and 3.3 with 2.7 being the
primary version, you would execute "make install" in your 2.7 build directory
and "make altinstall" in the others.
I just had to install them. Then I used the free (and portable) soft at http://defaultprogramseditor.com/ under "File type settings"/"Context menu"/search:"py", chose .py file and added an 'open' command for the 2 IDLE by copying the existant command named 'open with IDLE, changing names to IDLE 3.4.1/2.7.8, and remplacing the files numbers of their respective versions in the program path. Now I have just to right click the .py file and chose which IDLE I want to use. Can do the same with direct interpreters if you prefer.
I use a simple solution to switch from a version to another version of python, you can install all version you want. All you have to do is creating some variable environment.
In my case, I have installed python 2.7 and python 3.8.1, so I have created this environment variables:
PYTHON_HOME_2.7=<path_python_2.7>
PYTHON_HOME_3.8.1=<path_python_3.8.1>
PYTHON_HOME=%PYTHON_HOME_2.7%
then in my PATH environment variable I put only %PYTHON_HOME% and %PYTHON_HOME%\Scripts. In the example above I'm using the version 2.7, when I want to switch to the other version I have only to set the PYTHON_HOME=%PYTHON_HOME_3.8.1%.
I use this method to switch quickly from a version to another also for JAVA, MAVEN, GRADLE,ANT, and so on.
Only Works if your running your code in your Python IDE
I have both Python 2.7 and Python 3.3 installed on my windows operating system. If I try to launch a file, it will usually open up on the python 2.7 IDE. How I solved this issue, was when I choose to run my code on python 3.3, I open up python 3.3 IDLE(Python GUI), select file, open my file with the IDLE and save it. Then when I run my code, it runs to the IDLE that I currently opened it with. It works vice versa with 2.7.
I have installed both python 2.7.13 and python 3.6.1 on windows 10pro and I was getting the same "Fatal error" when I tried pip2 or pip3.
What I did to correct this was to go to the location of python.exe for python 2 and python 3 files and create a copy of each, I then renamed each copy to python2.exe and python3.exe depending on the python version in the installation folder. I therefore had in each python installation folder both a python.exe file and a python2.exe or python3.exe depending on the python version.
This resolved my problem when I typed either pip2 or pip3.
If you can't get anything else to work, open an interpreter in whichever version you choose (I prefer using iPython) and:
import subprocess
subprocess.call('python script.py -flags')
This uses whichever python version you are currently operating under. Works fine for a single script, but will quickly get out of hand if there are lots of scripts you run, in which case you can always make a batch file with all of these calls inside. Not the most elegant answer, but it works.
Is there a way to make aliases for different python version a la Linux?