I have both python2.7
and python3.2
installed in Ubuntu 12.04
.
The symbolic link python
links to python2.7
.
When I type:
sudo pip install package-name
It will default install python2
version of package-name
.
Some package supports both python2
and python3
.
How to install python3
version of package-name
via pip
?
pip-2.7
and pip-3.2
commands in your system?
/usr/bin/pip
from #!/usr/bin/python
to #!/usr/bin/python3
?
cp
the pip
to pip-3.2
then change it, so you would get a better choice next time :)
whereis pip
from your command line. It seems they have changed the names to pip2.7 on Ubuntu 14.04.
Ubuntu 12.10+ and Fedora 13+ have a package called python3-pip
which will install pip-3.2
(or pip-3.3
, pip-3.4
or pip3
for newer versions) without needing this jumping through hoops.
I came across this and fixed this without needing the likes of wget
or virtualenvs (assuming Ubuntu 12.04):
Install package python3-setuptools: run sudo aptitude install python3-setuptools, this will give you the command easy_install3. Install pip using Python 3's setuptools: run sudo easy_install3 pip, this will give you the command pip-3.2 like kev's solution. Install your PyPI packages: run sudo pip-3.2 install
You may want to build a virtualenv
of python3, then install packages of python3 after activating the virtualenv. So your system won't be messed up :)
This could be something like:
virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python3 py3env
source py3env/bin/activate
pip install package-name
virtualenv
with deactivate
and python3 might be installed at a different location. Mine is at /usr/local/bin/python3
, which you can find out with which python3
virtualenv -p `which python3` py3env
Short Answer
sudo apt-get install python3-pip
sudo pip3 install MODULE_NAME
Source: Shashank Bharadwaj's comment
Long Answer
The short answer applies only on newer systems. On some versions of Ubuntu the command is pip-3.2
:
sudo pip-3.2 install MODULE_NAME
If it doesn't work, this method should work for any Linux distro and supported version:
sudo apt-get install curl
curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py | sudo python3
sudo pip3 install MODULE_NAME
If you don't have curl
, use wget
. If you don't have sudo
, switch to root
. If pip3
symlink does not exists, check for something like pip-3.X
Much python packages require also the dev package, so install it too:
sudo apt-get install python3-dev
Sources:
python installing packages with pip
Pip latest install
Check also Tobu's answer if you want an even more upgraded version of Python.
I want to add that using a virtual environment is usually the preferred way to develop a python application, so @felixyan answer is probably the best in an ideal world. But if you really want to install that package globally, or if need to test / use it frequently without activating a virtual environment, I suppose installing it as a global package is the way to go.
curl
call borks for me with a syntax error on line 48.
UserWarning: Support for Python 3.0-3.2 has been dropped. Future versions will fail here.
The paste is at ix.io/1fX5 for all interested parties :)
syntax error
might occur when using a version of python that is no longer supported by pip
. The above commands do work with python3.5
sudo apt-get purge python3-pip
first
Well, on ubuntu 13.10/14.04, things are a little different.
Install
$ sudo apt-get install python3-pip
Install packages
$ sudo pip3 install packagename
NOT pip-3.3 install
The easiest way to install latest pip2
/pip3
and corresponding packages:
curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py | python2
pip2 install package-name
curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py | python3
pip3 install package-name
Note: please run these commands as root
I had the same problem while trying to install pylab, and I have found this link
So what I have done to install pylab within Python 3 is:
python3 -m pip install SomePackage
It has worked properly, and as you can see in the link you can do this for every Python version you have, so I guess this solves your problem.
python3-pip
package, it does not create a pip3
or pip-3
command as suggested in other answers. This answer indeed works.
pip
has already been installed via: sudo apt-get install python3-pip
Old question, but none of the answers satisfies me. One of my systems is running Ubuntu 12.04 LTS and for some reason there's no package python3-pip
or python-pip
for Python 3. So here is what I've done (all commands were executed as root):
Install setuptools for Python3 in case you haven't. apt-get install python3-setuptools or aptitude install python3-setuptools
With Python 2.4+ you can invoke easy_install with specific Python version by using python -m easy_install. So pip for Python 3 could be installed by: python3 -m easy_install pip
That's it, you got pip for Python 3. Now just invoke pip with the specific version of Python to install package for Python 3. For example, with Python 3.2 installed on my system, I used: pip-3.2 install [package]
If you have pip installed in both pythons, and both are in your path, just use:
$ pip-2.7 install PACKAGENAME
$ pip-3.2 install PACKAGENAME
References:
http://www.pip-installer.org/docs/pip/en/0.8.3/news.html#id4
https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/200
This is a duplicate of question #2812520
If your system has python2
as default, use below command to install packages to python3
$ python3 -m pip install <package-name>
Easy enough:
sudo aptitude install python3-pip
pip-3.2 install --user pkg
If you want Python 3.3, which isn't the default as of Ubuntu 12.10:
sudo aptitude install python3-pip python3.3
python3.3 -m pip.runner install --user pkg
You can alternatively just run pip3 install packagename
instead of pip
,
Firstly, you need to install pip for the Python 3 installation that you want. Then you run that pip to install packages for that Python version.
Since you have both pip and python 3 in /usr/bin, I assume they are both installed with a package manager of some sort. That package manager should also have a Python 3 pip. That's the one you should install.
Felix' recommendation of virtualenv is a good one. If you are only testing, or you are doing development, then you shouldn't install the package in the system python. Using virtualenv, or even building your own Pythons for development, is better in those cases.
But if you actually do want to install this package in the system python, installing pip for Python 3 is the way to go.
Although the question relates to Ubuntu, let me contribute by saying that I'm on Mac and my python
command defaults to Python 2.7.5. I have Python 3 as well, accessible via python3
, so knowing the pip package origin, I just downloaded it and issued sudo python3 setup.py install
against it and, surely enough, only Python 3 has now this module inside its site packages. Hope this helps a wandering Mac-stranger.
Execute the pip binary directly.
First locate the version of PIP you want.
jon-mint python3.3 # whereis ip
ip: /bin/ip /sbin/ip /usr/share/man/man8/ip.8.gz /usr/share/man/man7/ip.7.gz
Then execute.
jon-mint python3.3 # pip3.3 install pexpect
Downloading/unpacking pexpect
Downloading pexpect-3.2.tar.gz (131kB): 131kB downloaded
Running setup.py (path:/tmp/pip_build_root/pexpect/setup.py) egg_info for package pexpect
Installing collected packages: pexpect
Running setup.py install for pexpect
Successfully installed pexpect
Cleaning up...
You should install ALL dependencies: sudo apt-get install build-essential python3-dev python3-setuptools python3-numpy python3-scipy libatlas-dev libatlas3gf-base Install pip3(if you have installed, please look step 3): sudo apt-get install python3-pip Iinstall scikit-learn by pip3 pip3 install -U scikit-learn Open your terminal and entry python3 environment, type import sklearn to check it.
To install pip for python3 use should use pip3 instead of pip. To install python in ubuntu 18.08 bionic before installing a version of python, activate virtual environment so that it won't have any problem in a future versions of python.
virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python3 py3env
source py3env/bin/activate
then install the actual python version you want.
>> sudo apt-get install python3.7
To install the required pip package in ubuntu
>> sudo apt-get install python3-pip
You Can Simply type in terminal/console .
Commands
sudo apt update
sudo apt upgrade
sudo apt install python3-pip3
pip3 install package-name
Another way to install python3 is using wget. Below are the steps for installation.
wget http://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.3.5/Python-3.3.5.tar.xz
tar xJf ./Python-3.3.5.tar.xz
cd ./Python-3.3.5
./configure --prefix=/opt/python3.3
make && sudo make install
Also,one can create an alias for the same using
echo 'alias py="/opt/python3.3/bin/python3.3"' >> ~/.bashrc
Now open a new terminal and type py and press Enter.
Success story sharing
sudo pip-3.2 install <package>
, superuser permissions are required.sudo apt-get install python3-pip