上QQ阅读APP看书,第一时间看更新
Installing Python
- If you are using a Debian-based distribution such as Ubuntu you can install Python with:
$ sudo apt-get install python
If your system runs CentOS/RHEL, use the following command to install Python:
$ sudo yum install python
If it's a SuSE Linux distribution, use the following command to install Python:
$ sudo yum install python
- Check the version of installed Python interpreter with the following command in the Terminal:
$ python -version
This will print the current installed Python version.
- If you want to install a specific version of Python, we get the Python source code from the https://www.python.org/ website and install it manually. For this, you can download the required source archive from https://www.python.org/ftp/python/.
You can download with the following command; make sure to replace the version number with your required one:
$ wget https://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.6.2/Python-3.6.2.tgz
- Then we have to extract the downloaded archive with the following command:
$ tar -xvzf Python-3.6.2.tgz
It will be extracted to a Python-3.6.2 folder.
- Now you can configure, build, and install Python, for this you need to have a C compiler installed on your system. If it's not installed you can do it as follows:
-
- For Debian/Ubuntu:
$ sudo apt-get install gcc
-
- For CentOs/ RHEL:
$ yum install gcc
Then, you can run configure for configuring the build and then install the build with the make altinstall command:
$ cd Python-3.6.2 $ ./configure --prefix=/usr/local $ make altinstall
After installation, you can see both versions of Python installed on the system and you can choose which version to use while running the scripts.