python3-pip installed but pip3 command not found? - pip

I am testing a Python3 program in several computers. To do that, I need to install a library of Python with pip3.
So first, I was installing python3-pip in each computer (everyone is running a Kubuntu OS). Everything was OK, and then I installed the package I needed with pip3, and I managed to do that except for one computer.
In that computer, python3-pip was apparently installed succesfully, but when I look for the package, I get this error (the translation is homemade):
Command «pip3» was not found, may be you wanted to say:
The command «pip» from the package «python-pip» (universe)
pip3: command not found

By the way, I had asked this question here https://superuser.com/questions/769920/python3-pip-installed-but-pip3-command-not-found too. There is an answer which has several votes, in my case, may be I was doing something wrong but it not worked. But try it, may be you are luckier than me!

Related

pip install psd-tools3 => FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory

I was trying to install Ursina but I was having trouble getting all the required packages I needed to run my code properly. Come to find out, there's a package that refuses to install called 'psd-tools3' that won't install, no matter what I do.
I've been using cmd commands like 'pip install psd-tools3' and 'pip3 install psd-tools3' but no other commands work (i.e. 'sudo pip install psd-tools3' doesn't work because my PC doesn't know what 'sudo' means and doesn't run). I've tried installing required packages for this package, but nothing works. It just keeps giving me this error:
enter image description here
I would really appreciate the help with this problem. All I can really assume is that the Python file '_version' hasn't been created and that's what's throwing the whole program off. If there is a way to add this manually and then install it, I would appreciate steps to do that as well.
I was running this on a Lenovo Thinkpad (Windows 10) on Python 3.10 (I also have Python 3.8.3 but that was installed with the 3.10) and I made sure all packages and pip are up-to-date. Still having this problem and I don't know why.
Seems to me like the issue is on the side of the maintainers of psd-tools3.
For example, looking at the content of the latest source distribution on PyPI, we can see that it does not contain any _version.py file.
This needs to be solved by the project's maintainers, but they do not have a ticket tracker. On the other hand there seems to be an "Author" email address on the project's PyPI page as well as in the project's setup.py script.
A solution might be to clone the project's source code repository (with git), and try to install from the local clone.
Just simply try
pip install psd-tools3==1.9.0
Or
pip install psd-tools3==1.8.2
This should work on your pc as well. I was having same issue, and then I tried this It worked for me

Python 3.6 Mac OS X - How do you get PIP install?

In various educational guides, I have been guided to install Python modules with an easy one-line command entered in the terminal: pip install whatever
Well, when I type "pip install" it is not found.
Elsewhere in Stack Overflow the following instructions have been given:
Use apt-get -- but I am not using linux
Use easy-install pip -- but
it also produces command not found.
Use easy-install3 pip -- same problem: command not found.
Does PIP not install when you install Python 3.6?
Do I really have to edit the path myself - it seems to me, if necessary, the developers who created the installer would have done this and the path would have been updated when Python was installed.
Poking around the hidden system folders in OS X, I see that there is an alias called pip3.6 in usr/local/bin that was created a week ago when I installed Python 3.6.
I would try:
pip3.6 install whatever
Right, worked it out now.
Pip is installed when Python 3.6 is installed - but instead of typing "pip install", you type:
pip3.6 install <ModuleYouWant>
I guess this is so people can run Python 2.7 and 3.6 simultaneously.. it'd be nice if it were a little more intuitive though, or there were some instructions, or it just worked as pip gave you the option "2.7 or 3.6?"
For those OS X users in the dark like I was, please note that system files like the usr folder can be seen in Finder if you press Command+Shift+G then in the dialog box that pops up type /usr (There are other ways to see hidden folders too).

apt-get not working in Cygwin

I'm something of a Cygwin newbie, so that might be the problem, but I'm trying to install a package using apt-get and it's telling me there's no such command. I installed it on Windows 7.
The best I got from searching other questions here and across the net was that you need to install something specific (or run the setup file to update) when initially installing, but it's not clear to me what I need to install or run or whatever.
How do I install or update my cygwin to be able to use apt-get or, alternatively, how would I install packages with the basic, default installation of Cygwin that I already have?
Thank you.
You can use this : apt-cyg
It works just like apt-get in terms of command line arguments, but you will be using apt-cyg instead.
Refer https://github.com/transcode-open/apt-cyg It did helped me.
To install apt-cyg package.
Cygwin's official installer is setup.exe. This is the "proper" way to install Cygwin packages. There's a project called cyg-apt but it's not officially part of Cygwin.

IPython3 for Mac OSX

I have Ipython installed but it runs on python 2.7.5 , I also have python 3.3 installed. How can I make changes such that Ipython runs on python 3.3 not 2.7.5?
You need to install pip for Python 3 - it's as easy as going to the pip-installer.org Installation page and following the instructions. Briefly, download get-pip.py and save it someplace, like your Downloads folder. Navigate there in Terminal, and run
sudo python3 get-pip.py
and you should soon have either a pip3 or pip-3.3 command (maybe both, I don't remember). You should now be able to run
sudo pip3 install ipython[all]
and hopefully all the dependencies will be installed as well. If installation chokes, use pip3 to install pyzmq, tornado, pyreadline, jinja2, pygments, and maybe a few others. Make sure you read the docs before you start, so you have an idea of what you're trying to achieve. IPython is large and quite complex, with many moving parts, so in the absence of a package manager (see below) it can take a bit of time before everything is up and running.
The Package Manager Way
There are other options, too. You can install Anaconda, a "Completely free enterprise-ready Python distribution for large-scale data processing, predictive analytics, and scientific computing" with over 100 packages, including IPython and its dependencies. By default, the Anaconda installer gives you Python 2.7, but you can use the conda command to install Python 3.
My personal favorite is to install Python 3 and IPython using MacPorts. Yes, it'll install Py3 all over again, but unless you're really starving for disk space (in which case you probably don't want to be installing large packages like IPython) it's no big deal. Using the port command, once the base MacPorts installation has been put in place, you can just run
sudo port install py33-ipython +pyqt4
and all the other dependencies will be taken care of, (hopefully) flawlessly, without your having to do anything else except wait for a long time while things like PyQt are compiled. You may also need to run sudo port install py33-ipython +notebook if you want the notebook, I don't recall if it's installed otherwise. BTW, you do need X11, Xcode, and the Xcode command-line tools for MacPorts, but they would likely be required if you do the first option as not all packages have binaries available for OS X. The excellent documentation walks you through everything, from installation to using the port command to maintaining your system. I would highly recommend modifying your ~/.profile (or ~/.bash_profile, ~/.bashrc, or equivalent for your shell) to add the MacPorts install directories (/opt/local/bin and /opt/local/sbin, by default) to the front of your path. Just add export PATH='/opt/local/bin:/opt/local/sbin:$PATH' to the end of the file.
A third alternative option is to use Homebrew. It's similar to MacPorts, in that the brew command is a type of package manager like port and conda, but in my experience it doesn't have as many packages, and doesn't quite work as seamlessly as port. However, my observations on StackOverflow, Ask Different and other fora seem to indicate that about 50% of people have great experiences with brew and don't like port, while the other half loves port over brew. YMMV.
I hope this helps. Good luck with your installation!

pip is not uninstalling packages

Background
I'm working on an academic project to (basically) analyze some "who follows whom" graphs and wanted to get some real data (by building some small datasets) from Twitter using one of the Python Twitter API packages in order to test some ideas I have.
I was a bit careless and installed two packages:
a) python-twitter0.8.2 (http://pypi.python.org/pypi/python-twitter/0.8.2)
b) twitter1.9.1 (http://pypi.python.org/pypi/twitter/1.9.1)
(a) is called python-twitter in pypi, and (b) is called twitter, so that's how I'll refer to them.
Both of these are called by import twitter in the Python interpreter, but when I write that line, I always get the twitter one (if I can figure out how to use the python-twitter one, I'll be able to proceed, but will still have the same underlying problem).
Problem
Since I don't need the twitter package, I decided to uninstall it with pip:
$ sudo pip uninstall twitter
which gives the output:
Uninstalling twitter:
Proceed (y/n)? y
Successfully uninstalled twitter
(actually, I tried the same thing with python-twitter and got a similar response).
However, when running pip freeze, both of these packages show up on the installed list! In fact, I can still use the import twitter command successfully in the interpreter. Clearly the packages have not been uninstalled. What I would love to know is how to uninstall them!
Other Info
I'm using Python 2.7 and Ubuntu 12.04
When running IDLE instead of the shell interpreter, and I type help('modules'), neither twitter nor python-twitter shows up in the list. When typing help('modules') into the shell interpreter, I get a segmentation fault error, and the interpreter crashes. Here's the error:
>>> help('modules')
Please wait a moment while I gather a list of all available modules...
/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/gobject/constants.py:24: Warning:
g_boxed_type_register_static: assertion `g_type_from_name (name) == 0' failed
import gobject._gobject
/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/gtk-2.0/gtk/__init__.py:40: Warning:
g_boxed_type_register_static: assertion `g_type_from_name (name) == 0' failed
from gtk import _gtk
** (python:2484): CRITICAL **: pyg_register_boxed: assertion `boxed_type != 0' failed
/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/gtk-2.0/gtk/__init__.py:40: Warning: cannot register
existing type `GdkDevice'
from gtk import _gtk
/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/gtk-2.0/gtk/__init__.py:40: Warning: g_type_get_qdata:
assertion `node != NULL' failed
from gtk import _gtk
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
Why other questions have not resolved this for me:
I looked at the similar post at pip freeze lists uninstalled packages and am not having the same issues.
$ sudo which pip
/usr/bin/pip
$ which pip
/usr/bin/pip
which is the same output. In addition, $ sudo pip freeze gives the same output as $ pip freeze.
Any help is very much appreciated!
You can always manually delete the packages; you can run:
sudo rm -rf /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/twitter
to remove that package from your dist-packages directory. You may have to edit the easy-install.pth file in the same directory and remove the twitter entry from it.
While Martin's solution works, as a work around, it does not provide a direct answer.
Ubuntu's pip version for your Ubuntu version (12.04) is:
python-pip (1.0-1build1)
This is also the same version for Debian Wheezy. This version has a weired bug, which causes packages not to be removed.
If you obtain pip from upstream using the script get-pip.py you will have a fixed version of pip which can remove pacakges (as of now v. 1.5.6).
update
Python's pip is really a fast moving target. So using Debian's or Ubuntu's pip is guaranteed to have bugs. Please don't use those distribution's pip.
Instead install pip from upstream.
If you would like to register pip installed packages as system packages I really recommend that you also use stdeb.
I was facing difficulty while upgrading a package because pip was not able to uninstall it successfully. I had to delete the .egg-info and the folder as well in /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages and then I tried to install with --upgrade and it worked.
For me, it was due to the fact that I was running pip freeze, which gave me different results than sudo pip freeze.
Since I was uninstalling using sudo, it was not uninstalling it in the "non-sudo" session. Uninstalling without sudo fixed that.
In my case (moving pyusb 0.4x to 1.0x), removing the old package with apt-get remove python-usb and manually installing the manually downloaded package via python setup.py worked. Not pretty, but working.

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