I have installed jupyter - but to double check ran the install again:
pip install jupyter
..
Requirement already satisfied (use --upgrade to upgrade): jupyter in ./.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages
However there is no jupyter (or jupyter-notebook etc.) on the $PATH or anywhere under /usr
find /usr -name jupyter
Where is it installed? I am on ubuntu 16.0.4
Maybe I'm wrong but is your
PYTHONPATH
correct?
Because it should be installed there :
/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages
or
/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages
And if really you struggle with system based python and Jupyter, I think you should install Anaconda instead.
It's the most used, production ready, compartimented python environment.
And it has jupyter built-in.
To finish my argumentation, it's the recommanded way to install Jupyter.
Related
I am trying to install feature-engine module on anaconda
this is the error i am getting
Package is not available from current channels
repo.anaconda win 64 , noarch etc.
Can you please help me with the problem?
Thanks,
RD
to install from anaconda:
conda install -c conda-forge feature_engine
I believe that feature-engine is not available through anaconda channels for installation with conda install. I was able to install it via pip. Here is how I did it (in Windows):
open a CMD and run conda activate <<VIRTUALENV>>. This is the environment you create for your project. If you have not created one, then use base, the default one.
cd to the location of your pip installation within that activated conda Virtual environment (mine was within my user folder in \AppData\Local\Continuum\anaconda3\envs\<<VIRTUALENV>>\Scripts).
in there, run pip install feature-engine
you should now be able to see it listed under pip freeze or pip list, but not under conda list.
Finally, go to your code location and run the code. remember to activate that same <> each time you open a new CMD to run it.
Hope it helps.
If you are using Jupyter Notebooks, it might be the case that your Jupyter Notebook is not actually running the kernel in your (activated!) Anaconda environment (via this answer), but the generic Python3 kernel that only can import packages from your global Anaconda environment.
You can check for this by importing a package that is installed in your global environment (e.g., pandas), while running a notebook:
import pandas
pandas.__file__
If you see something likes this (on Windows), you are indeed running the wrong kernel (as you would expect the packages to be loaded from the activated environments):
'C:\\Users\\<user>\\Anaconda3\\lib\\site-packages\\pandas\\__init__.py'
Therefore, in your Anaconda Prompt, you have to create a new kernel within ipykernel (assuming cenv is your environment of interest):
$ conda activate cenv # . ./cenv/bin/activate in case of virtualenv
(cenv)$ conda install ipykernel
(cenv)$ ipython kernel install --user --name=<any_name_for_kernel>
(cenv)$ jupyter notebook
Now, in the restarted Jupyter Notebook you can change the kernel via the menu: Kernel > Change kernel > <any_name_for_kernel>
Importing the same package, like pandas, should show the following file path:
'C:\\Users\\<user>\\Anaconda3\\envs\\<cenv>\\lib\\site-packages\\pandas\\__init__.py'
and you should be able to import any package installed in that Anaconda environment.
Fair Warning: I am extremely new to python, so please excuse any dumb mistakes I make =)
I would like to be able to open/close/manipulate/read Word documents (docx files) on my Mac using Python. The python-docx module looked really useful, so I have been trying to install it on my system, to no avail.
Here's what I've done so far:
Checked that I do indeed have python installed using the python --version command in terminal. I have version 3.7.0, so all good there.
Checked that I do indeed have pip installed - I was able to use pip install and pip uninstall commands, so all good. I also upgraded my pip version using pip install --upgrade pip to pip-19.1.1
Following the online documentation (see here), I tried pip install python-docx. This seemed to work just fine, and after the progress bar loaded all the way I saw:
Successfully built python-docx
twisted 18.7.0 requires PyHamcrest>=1.9.0, which is not installed.
Installing collected packages: python-docx
Successfully installed python-docx-0.8.10
I wasn't completely sure what pyhamcrest was, but I installed it anyway just to be safe using pip install pyhamcrest
As other sites suggested, I also tried to install Pillow, lxml, and python-dateutil using their respective install commands, and in each case saw the Requirement already satisfied: message, with an anaconda path listed.
Frustrated, I also tried easy_install python-docx, the manual version, and even pip install docx . In all cases, when I run IDLE and type from docx import Document or just import docx, I get the following message in the shell:
`Traceback (most recent call last):`
`File "/Users/[my_name]/Desktop/Medical.py", line 3, in <module> `
`import docx`
`ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'docx'`
Could anyone help point me in the right direction? Thank you very much.
The Anaconda Python distribution has its own system of installation of packages.
After the installation of Anaconda, the variable $PATH has been modified so that anaconda python was the first, and OsX's python in the last position.
If you type "python" in a shell will execute the anaconda python, instead of the standard OsX python (which is 2.7, not 3.x).
Following the instructions of the package python-docx, you have installed it using pip, which is the default method for installing packages, but this method is not valid for Anaconda Python. So, you finished installing python-docx for the python 2.7 of OsX.
To install packages for anaconda, you must run the command
conda install <package>
The python-docx module for anaconda can be found in a separated repository called conda-forge; typing the command
conda install -c conda-forge python-docx
you will install the package and the requested dependencies.
Other useful commands are:
anaconda-navigator for exploring the Anaconda system
anaconda-project for managing projects with anaconda
idle3 for Anaconda Python shell.
Before start coding, run anaconda-navigator and take a look at the 'Learning' section.
For a better experience, I suggest PyCharm IDE for Anaconda from JetBrains.
I've installed anaconda2 and anaconda3 from official website
and now have 2 folders:
user/anaconda with anaconda2
user/anaconda3/anaconda with anacaonda3
the default path for python is set for anaconda 2:
MacBook-Air:anaconda zelenov$ which python
/Users/zelenov/anaconda/bin/python
but when I run jupyter notebook I can create only python 3 notebook
how can I add my python2 environment?
I tried this, but it didn't help:
python2 -m pip install ipykernel
python2 -m ipykernel install --user
Thanks in advance for any help!
Choose one Anaconda distribution, not both. I suggest uninstalling one of those distributions, e.g. Python 2. Then create an environment within your Python 3 distribution:
> conda create --name py27 python=2.7
Once the environment is created, you need to enter it, install ipykernel, then exit the environment once completed.
> source activate py27
> conda install ipykernel
> source deactivate
Note source can be omitted for Windows users. As of Anaconda 4.2, installing ipykernel is sufficient for creating a jupyter kernel automatically. Start jupyter:
> jupyter notebook
You should see a dropdown menu in the dashboard with the name of the py27 kernel installed. For more information on installing Python kernels, see Jupyter documentation.
I switch to any other virtualenv and do a "pip install jupyter", when I run the notebook the Python 3 kernel is hardcoded to point to the python of the initial virtualenv that jupyter was installed in.
Is there a way to fix this?
So I installed Anaconda on my Ubuntu linux 12.04LTS x64 box. It seems to work fine except for this. So I created a conda environment using the
conda create -n py33dev python=3 anaconda
When I try to run the ipython shell, I would expect to get the Ipython3 shell and notebook. However, it still loads the ipython 2.7.6 shell. I tried using the ipython3 command, but it will then load an ipython3 shell from my computer and not from Anaconda.
I tried to install ipython3 to the Anaconda environment using
pip install ipython3
and
conda install ipython3
However, when I do this I just get a message saying "No packages found matching: ipython3"
So I am not sure why Anaconda runs fine with python2 but not with python3--even though Continuum indicates it is python3 ready. Am I missing a step anywhere? Does anyone know how to solve this?
Did you remember to do "source activate py33dev"?