Reputation: 353
I have my deployment system running CentOS 6.
It has by default python 2.6.6 installed. So, "which python" gives me /usr/bin/python (which is 2.6.6)
I later installed python3.5, which is invoked as python3 ("which python3" gives me /usr/local/bin/python3)
Using pip, I need to install a few packages that are specific to python3. So I did pip install using:- "sudo yum install python-pip" So "which pip" is /usr/bin/pip.
Now whenever I do any "pip install", it just installs it for 2.6.6. :-(
It is clear that pip installation got tied to python 2.6.6 and invoking pip later, only installs packages for 2.6.6.
How can I get around this issue?
Upvotes: 18
Views: 35102
Reputation: 462
I had to pip install a pypi only package (no conda package) in a conda environment - this is how I did it (on a mac, in this case):
/opt/anaconda3/envs/<name of conda environment>/bin/python -m pip install <name of package to install>
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 8291
I have python 3.6 and 3.8 on my Ubuntu 18.04 WSL machine. Running
sudo apt-get install python3-pip
pip3 install my_package_name
kept installing packages into Python 3.6 dist directories. The only way that I could install packages for Python 3.8 was:
python3.8 -m pip install my_package_name
That installed appropriate package into the Python 3.8 dist package directory so that when I ran my code with python3.8, the required package was available.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1003
Example of how to install pip
for a specific python version
curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py -o get-pip.py
/opt/local/bin/python2.7 get-pip.py
Script is from official doc: https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/installing/
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 21
On Ubuntu 18.04.1 LTS I wanted to install pip for my second python version (python3) and the following command did the trick for me:
$ sudo apt install python3-pip
Upvotes: -3
Reputation: 181
If pip
isn’t already installed, then first try to bootstrap it from the standard library:
$ python3.5 -m ensurepip --default-pip
If that still doesn’t allow you to run pip:
sudo python3.5 get-pip.py
. Now you can use pip3
to install packages for python3.5. For example, try:
$ sudo pip3 install ipython # isntall IPython for python3.5
Alternatively, as long as the corresponding pip
has been installed, you can use pip
for a specific Python version like this:
$ python3.5 -m pip install SomePackage # specifically Python 3.5
References:
Upvotes: 18