Using a Raspberry Pi using Debian 4.14.34-v7+, I am trying to get pipenv
set up with Python 3.6.5 as the default version of Python. I first install Python 3.6 b
I suggest you two approaches:
pip install --python 3.7 <your desired version number to be replaced>
(This requires either asdf or pyenv installed. If you don't have them installed, read on!)
Download the python gzip from python.org and extract it to a folder, cd to it.
Hit the following
./configure
make
sudo make install
Now you have python version locally installed, all you gotta do is step one.
pipenv install --python <version-u-installed>
Note: If for any case, if you want to uninstall,go to the directory where you executed make, and simply hit make uninstall
Hope that helps! Happy coding!
If you want to create a virtual environment for your project the answers above might not work for you. For instance, if you have multiple versions of python installed and you had to rename the executables like I had to in the below example, OR for the same project you might want to create virtual environments that use different python versions.
When creating virtual environments for your projects, you can more specific and specify the path of the python executable.
Remember to run the below command relative to the project folder.
pipenv install --python 'C:\Python373\python373.exe'
When setting up your pipenv you can specify the version of Python by using: pipenv --python 3.6
, to use Python3.6.
Editing the Pipfile
also works, by changing:
[requires]
python_version = "3.6.6"
to the specific version of Python you want.
If you did all of this and are still having trouble with accessing the correct version of Python from within pipenv shell
then you might want to check your .bashrc
file to be sure that you don't have an alias
for a specific version of Python.
"Edit the Pipfile" is the right way to go if you want to change the Python version of an existing environment.
If you want to create a new environment using Python 3.6, you can run
pipenv install --python 3.6
rather than
pipenv install --three
and that should do the trick.
Just be certain to delete the old Pipfile(s) if you create the new environment or else the commands will fail.