I am trying to install dependencies using pip3
command
current scenario:
Dev$ which python
/Users/Dev/anaconda/bin/python
Dev$ which python3
/usr/local/bin/python3
Dev$ pip --version
pip 10.0.1 from /usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/pip (python 2.7)
Dev$ pip3 --version
-bash: /usr/local/bin/pip3: /usr/local/opt/python3/bin/python3.6: bad
interpreter: No such file or directory
I have no idea why my pip3
command is not working.
I have tried things like this:
brew link --overwrite python
You can try to change the python version of pip by doing
vim /path/to/pip
Then change the commented line (first line) with the desired version of Python.
You've got a whole slew of different Python installations, plus at least one former Python installation that you deleted.
Situations like this are exactly why running
pip
orpip3
directly is no longer recommended, in favor of:This guarantees that you're absolutely positively running the
pip
that goes with whateverpython3
means, whilepip3
just means you're running thepip
that goes with some Python 3.x, which may be any of the various ones you've installed.Or, even better, use virtual environments, so you can rely on the fact that
python
andpip
are the commands from the currently-active environment, and not even worry about what they mean system-wide.But, if you want to know how you got into this mess and how to fix it:
Your
python3
command is probably from a Homebrew Python (you can check;ls -l /usr/local/bin/python3
and see if it's a symlink to something in/usr/local/Cellar/python
).Your
pip3
command is from a Python 3 that doesn't exist. Most likely, you installed another Python 3, which overwrote thepip3
from the Homebrew Python 3, and then uninstalled it, leaving a brokenpip
behind.The simplest thing to do is to just
rm /usr/local/bin/pip3
. Then, assuming you want your Homebrew Python to be your default forpython3
andpip3
, redo thebrew link python
command. If it shows you any warnings or errors, you still have other things to fix. If not,/usr/local/bin/pip3
should now be the Homebrew 3.6pip
, andwhich pip3
should pick out/usr/local/bin/pip3
, and everything is good until the next time you install another Python 3 and overwrite a bunch of stuff.A better fix would be to pick one way of installing Python—whether Anaconda, Homebrew, python.org installers, or whatever—and use that consistently. Uninstall everything, reinstall the one you actually want, and never touch the others again. (Unfortunately, you will still be stuck with Apple's system Python 2.7, but if you're only using 3.x, that won't matter.)
I've faced the same situation, after above, my program working properly, Ubuntu 16.04.6 amd64
please check your python version on your current environment,ensure it's python3