How do I install Pip for Python 3.8 ? I made 3.8 my default Python version.
sudo apt install python3.8-pip
gives
unable to locate package python3.8-pip
and running
python3.8 -m pip install [package]
gives
no module named pip
I can't run sudo apt install python3-pip because it installs pip for Python 3.6
Install pip the official way:
curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py -o get-pip.py
python3.8 get-pip.py
made 3.8 my default Python version
It depends on how you did that, but it might break something in your OS. For example some packages on Ubuntu 18.04 might depend on python being python2.7 or python3 being python3.6 with some pip packages preinstalled.
sudo apt install python3.8
sudo apt install python3.8-distutils
wget https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py
sudo python3.8 get-pip.py
If you installed Python3.8 using apt, the pip documentation advises against using the get-pip.py script:
Be cautious if you are using a Python install that is managed by your operating system or another package manager. get-pip.py does not coordinate with those tools, and may leave your system in an inconsistent state.
The same page suggests running:
python3.8 -m pip --version
to determine if pip is already installed. I installed Python 3.8 on an Ubuntu18 machine using apt install python3.8, and I verified with the command above that it includes pip. It appears that Ubuntu package doesn't install a pip command that you can run directly. But you can run it using the python3.8 binary directly instead, anywhere you would have used pip:
python3.8 -m pip install [package]
you can try updating line #1 from /usr/bin/pip3 to #!/usr/bin/python3.8 as below
#!/usr/bin/python3.8
# GENERATED BY DEBIAN
import sys
# Run the main entry point, similarly to how setuptools does it, but because
# we didn't install the actual entry point from setup.py, don't use the
# pkg_resources API.
from pip import main
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.exit(main())
What I used to install pip according to the current version of default python is:
sudo apt-get install python-pip
Whenever I am trying to install any package using pip, I am getting this import error:
guru#guru-notebook:~$ pip3 install numpy
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/bin/pip3", line 9, in <module>
from pip import main
ImportError: cannot import name 'main'
guru#guru-notebook:~$ cat `which pip3`
#!/usr/bin/python3
# GENERATED BY DEBIAN
import sys
# Run the main entry point, similarly to how setuptools does it, but because
# we didn't install the actual entry point from setup.py, don't use the
# pkg_resources API.
from pip import main
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.exit(main())
It was working fine earlier, I am not sure why it is throwing this error.
I have searched about this error, but can't find anything to fix it.
Please let me know if you need any further detail, I will update my question.
You must have inadvertently upgraded your system pip (probably through something like sudo pip install pip --upgrade)
pip 10.x adjusts where its internals are situated. The pip3 command you're seeing is one provided by your package maintainer (presumably debian based here?) and is not a file managed by pip.
You can read more about this on pip's issue tracker
You'll probably want to not upgrade your system pip and instead use a virtualenv.
To recover the pip3 binary you'll need to sudo python3 -m pip uninstall pip && sudo apt install python3-pip --reinstall.
If you want to continue in "unsupported territory" (upgrading a system package outside of the system package manager), you can probably get away with python3 -m pip ... instead of pip3.
We can clear the error by modifying the pip file.
Check the location of the file:
$ which pip
path -> /usr/bin/pip
Go to that location(/usr/bin/pip) and open terminal
Enter: $ sudo nano pip
You can see:
import sys
from pip import main
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.exit(main())
Change to:
import sys
from pip import __main__
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.exit(__main__._main())
then ctrl + o write the changes and exit
Hope this will do!!
For Ubuntu family, Debian, Linux Mint users
Thanks to Anthony's explanation above, you can retain your original system pip (in /usr/bin/ and dist-packages/) and remove the manually-installed pip (in ~/.local/) to resolve the conflict:
$ python3 -m pip uninstall pip
Ubuntu/Debian pip v8.1.1 (16.04) from python3-pip debian package (see$ pip3 -V) shows the same search results as the latest pip v10.0.1, and installs latest modules from PyPI just fine. It has a working pip command (already in the $PATH), plus the nice --user option patched-in by default since 2016. Looking at pip release notes, the newer versions are mostly about use-case specific bug fixes and certain new features, so not everyone has to rush upgrading pip just yet. And the new pip 10 can be deployed to Python virtualenvs, anyway.
But regardless of pips, your OS allows to quickly install common Python modules (including numpy) with APT, without the need for pip, for example:
$ sudo apt install python3-numpy python3-scipy (with system dependencies)
$ sudo apt install python3-pip (Debian-patched pip, slightly older but it doesn't matter)
Quick apt syntax reminder (please see man apt for details):
$ sudo apt update (to resync Ubuntu package index files from up-to-date sources)
$ apt search <python-package-name> (full text-search on all available packages)
$ apt show <python-package-name> (displays the detailed package description)
$ sudo apt install <python-package-name>
Package names prefixed with python- are for Python 2; and prefixed with python3- are for Python 3 (e.g. python3-pandas). There are thousands, and they undergo integration testing within Debian and Ubuntu. Unless you seek to install at per-user level (pip install --user option) or within virtualenv/venv, apt could be what you needed. These system packages are accessible from virtual envs too, as virtualenv will gracefully fall back to using system libs on import if your envs don't have given copies of modules.
Your custom-installed (with pip --user) per-user modules in ~/.local/lib will override them too.
Note, since this is a system-wide installation, you'd rarely need to remove them (need to be mindful about OS dependencies). This is convenient for packages with many system dependencies (such as with scipy or matplotlib), as APT will keep track and provide all required system libs and C extensions, while with pip you have no such guarantees.
In fact, for system-wide Python packages (in contrast to per-user, home dir level, or lower), Ubuntu expects using the APT package manager (rather than sudo pip) to avoid breaking OS: sudo pip3 targets the very same /usr/lib/python3/dist-packages directory where APT stores OS-sensitive modules. Recent Debian/Ubuntu releases depend heavily on Python 3, so its pre-installed modules are managed by apt and shouldn't be changed.
So if you use pip3 install command, please ensure that it runs in an isolated virtual dev environment, such as with virtualenv (sudo apt install python3-virtualenv), or with Python3 built-in (-m venv), or at a per-user level (--user pip option, default in Ubuntu-provided pip since 2016), but not system-wide (never sudo pip3!), because pip interferes with the operation of the APT package manager and may affect Ubuntu OS components when a system-used python module is unexpectedly changed. Good luck!
P. S. All the above is for the 'ideal' solution (Debian/Ubuntu way).
If you still want to use the new pip3 v10 exclusively, there are 3 quick workarounds:
simply open a new bash session (a new terminal tab, or type bash) - and pip3 v10 becomes available (see pip3 -V). debian's pip3 v8 remains installed but is broken; or
the command $ hash -d pip3 && pip3 -V to refresh pip3 pathname in the $PATH. debian's pip3 v8 remains installed but is broken; or
the command $ sudo apt remove python3-pip && hash -d pip3 to uninstall debian's pip3 v8 completely, in favor of your new pip3 v10.
Note: You will always need to add --user flag to any non-debian-provided pip, unless you are in a virtualenv! (it deploys python packages to ~/.local/, default in debian/ubuntu-provided python3-pip and python-pip since 2016). Your use of pip 10 system-wide, outside of virtualenv, is not really supported by Ubuntu/Debian. Never sudo pip3!
Further details:
https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/5221#issuecomment-382069604
https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/5240#issuecomment-381673100
resolved in one step only.
I too faced this issue, But this can be resolved simply by 1 command without bothering around and wasting time and i have tried it on multiple systems it's the cleanest solution for this issue. And that's:
For python3:- sudo python3 -m pip uninstall pip && sudo apt install python3-pip --reinstall.
By this , you can simply install packages using pip3. to check use pip3 --version.
For older versions, use : sudo python -m pip uninstall pip && sudo apt install python-pip --reinstall.
By this, now you can simply install packages using pip. to check use pip --version.
Use python -m pip install instead of pip install
Example:
python -m pip install --user somepackage
python3 -m pip install --user somepackage
The pip (resp. pip3) executable is provided by your distro (python-pip package on Ubuntu 16.04) and located at /usr/bin/pip.
Therefore, it is not kept up-to date with the pip package itself as you upgrade pip, and may break.
If you just use python -m pip directly, e.g. as in:
python -m pip install --user somepackage
python3 -m pip install --user somepackage
it goes through your Python path, finds the latest version of pip and executes that file.
It relies on the fact that file is executable through import, but that is a very standard type of interface, and therefore less likely to break than the hackier Debian script.
Then I recommend adding the following aliases to your .bashrc:
pip() ( python -m pip "$#" )
pip3() ( python3 -m pip "$#" )
The Ubuntu 18.04 /usr/bin/pip3 file does:
from pip import main
and presumably main was removed from pip at some point which is what broke things.
The breaking pip commit appears to be: 95bcf8c5f6394298035a7332c441868f3b0169f4 "Move all internal APIs to pip._internal" which went into pip 18.0.
Tested in Ubuntu 16.04 after an update from pip3 9.0.1 to 18.0.
pyenv
Ultimately however, for serious Python development I would just recommend that you install your own local Python with pyenv + virtualenv, which would also get around this Ubuntu bug: https://askubuntu.com/questions/682869/how-do-i-install-a-different-python-version-using-apt-get/1195153#1195153
You can resolve this issue by reinstalling pip.
Use one of the following command line commands to reinstall pip:
Python2:
python -m pip uninstall pip && sudo apt install python-pip --reinstall
Python3:
python3 -m pip uninstall pip && sudo apt install python3-pip --reinstall
Check if pip has been cached on another path, to do so, call $ which pip and check that the path is different from the one prompted in the error, if that's the case run:
$ hash -r
When the cache is clear, pip will be working again.
reference: http://cheng.logdown.com/posts/2015/06/14/-usr-bin-pip-no-such-file-or-directory
I'm running on a system where I have sudo apt but no sudo pip. (And no su access.) I got myself into this same situation by following the advice from pip:
You are using pip version 8.1.1, however 18.0 is available. You should consider upgrading via the 'pip install --upgrade pip' command.
None of the other fixes worked for me, because I don't have enough admin privileges. However, a few things stuck with me from reading up on this:
I shouldn't have done this. Sure, pip told me to. It lied.
Using --user solves a lot of issues by focusing on the user-only directory.
So, I found this command line to work to revert me back to where I was. If you were using a different version than 8.1.1, you will obviously want to change that part of the line.
python -m pip install --force-reinstall pip==8.1.1 --user
That's the only thing that worked for me, but it worked perfectly!
I met the same problem on my Ubuntu 16.04 system. I managed to fix it by re-installing pip with the following command:
curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py | sudo python3
Recover with python3 -m pip install --user pip==9.0.1 (or the version that worked)
Same thing happened to me on Pixelbook using the new LXC (strech). This solution is very similar to the accepted one, with one subtle difference, whiched fixed pip3 for me.
sudo python3 -m pip install --upgrade pip
That bumped the version, and now it works as expected.
I found it here ... Python.org: Ensure pip is up-to-date
The commands above didn't work for me but those were very helpful:
sudo apt purge python3-pip
sudo rm -rf '/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/pip'
sudo apt install python3-pip
cd
cd .local/lib/python3/site-packages
sudo rm -rf pip*
cd
cd .local/lib/python3.5/site-packages
sudo rm -rf pip*
sudo pip3 install jupyter
In ubuntu 18.04.1 Bionic Beaver, you need to log out and log back in (restart not necessary) to get the proper environment.
$ sudo apt install python-pip
$ pip --version
pip 9.0.1 from /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages (python 2.7)
$ pip install --upgrade pip
$ pip --version
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/bin/pip", line 9, in <module>
from pip import main
ImportError: cannot import name main
$ exit
<login>
$ pip --version
pip 18.1 from /home/test/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/pip (python 2.7)
I use sudo apt remove python3-pip then pip works.
~ sudo pip install pip --upgrade
[sudo] password for sen:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/bin/pip", line 9, in <module>
from pip import main
ImportError: cannot import name 'main'
➜ ~ sudo apt remove python3-pip
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
The following packages were automatically installed and are no longer required:
libexpat1-dev libpython3-dev libpython3.5-dev python-pip-whl python3-dev python3-wheel
python3.5-dev
Use 'sudo apt autoremove' to remove them.
The following packages will be REMOVED:
python3-pip
0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 1 to remove and 0 not upgraded.
After this operation, 569 kB disk space will be freed.
Do you want to continue? [Y/n] y
(Reading database ... 215769 files and directories currently installed.)
Removing python3-pip (8.1.1-2ubuntu0.4) ...
Processing triggers for man-db (2.7.5-1) ...
➜ ~ pip
Usage:
pip <command> [options]
For Python version 2.7 #Anthony solution works perfect, by changing python3 to python as follows:
sudo python -m pip uninstall pip && sudo apt install python-pip --reinstall
What worked for me to fix the error with using pip3 was:
sudo cp -v /usr/local/bin/pip3 /usr/bin/pip3
Everything works:
demon#UbuntuHP:~$ pip -V
pip 10.0.1 from /usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/pip (python 3.5)
demon#UbuntuHP:~$ pip2 -V
pip 10.0.1 from /home/demon/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/pip (python 2.7)
demon#UbuntuHP:~$ pip3 -V
pip 10.0.1 from /usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/pip (python 3.5)
Maybe the new 10.0.1 version of pip doesn't update the binary in /usr/bin ? (which seems it does not)
EDIT: the same issue occurs in Ubuntu 18.04. The best solution I've found is to symlink the pip binaries from /home/<user/.local/bin to /usr/local/bin or /usr/bin (depending on your preference), as follows:
ln -sv /home/<user>/.local/bin/pip /usr/local/bin/pip
ln -sv /home/<user>/.local/bin/pip2 /usr/local/bin/pip2
ln -sv /home/<user>/.local/bin/pip2.7 /usr/local/bin/pip2.7
ln -sv /home/<user>/.local/bin/pip3 /usr/local/bin/pip3
ln -sv /home/<user>/.local/bin/pip3.6 /usr/local/bin/pip3.6
NOTE: replace <user> with your current running user
The associated versions (latest) are in:
Version 3.6:
/home/demon/.local/lib/python3.6/site-packages/pip (python 3.6)
Version 2.7:
/home/demon/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/pip (python 2.7)
Trick and works too
sudo -H pip install lxml
I had this same error, but python -m pip was still working, so I fixed it with the nuclear option sudo python -m pip install --upgrade pip. It did it for me.
For what it's worth, I had the problem with pip (not pip2 or pip3):
$ pip -V
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/bin/pip", line 9, in <module>
from pip import main
ImportError: cannot import name main
$ pip2 -V
pip 8.1.1 from /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages (python 2.7)
$ pip3 -V
pip 8.1.1 from /usr/lib/python3/dist-packages (python 3.5)
Somehow (I can't remember how) I had python stuff installed in my ~/.local directory. After I removed the pip directory from there, pip started working again.
$ rm -rf /home/precor/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/pip
$ pip -V
pip 8.1.1 from /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages (python 2.7)
Is something wrong with the packages, when it generating de file /usr/bin/pip,
you have to change the import:
from pip import main
to
from pip._internal import main
That solves the problem, I'm not sure why it generated, but it saids somthing in the following issue:
After pip 10 upgrade on pyenv "ImportError: cannot import name 'main'"
You can try this:
sudo ln -sf $( type -P pip ) /usr/bin/pip
I also run into this problem when I wanted to upgrade system pip pip3 from 9.0.1 to 19.2.3.
After running pip3 install --upgrade pip, pip version becomes 19.2.3. But main() has been moved in pip._internal in the latest version, which leaves pip3 broken.
So in file /usr/bin/pip3, replace line 9: from pip import main with from pip._internal import main. The issue will be fixed, works the same for python2-pip. (Tested on Ubuntu 18.04 distribution)
According to #Vincent H.'s answer
Please run the following commands to do the fix. After running python3 -m pip install --upgrade pip, please run the following command.
hash -r pip
Source: https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/5221
you can simply fix the pip and pip3 paths using update-alternatives
first thing you should check is your current $PATH
run echo $PATH and see is you can find /usr/local/bin which is where pip3 and pip usually are
there is a change your system is looking here /bin/pip and /bin/pip3
so i will say fix the PATH by adding to your ~/.bash_profile file so it persists
export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/bin
and then check is its fixed with which pip and which pip3
if not then use update-alternatives to fix it finally
update-alternatives --install /bin/pip3 pip3 /usr/local/bin/pip3 30
and if you want to point pip to pip3 then
update-alternatives --install /bin/pip pip /usr/local/bin/pip3 30
I have the same problem and solved it. Here is my solution.
First, when I run pip install something, the error came out like this:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/bin/pip3", line 9, in <module>
from pip import main
ImportError: cannot import name 'main'
So, I cd into the file /usr/bin/ and cat pip3 to see the code in it. I see this in it:
#!/usr/bin/python3
# GENERATED BY DEBIAN
import sys
# Run the main entry point, similarly to how setuptools does it, but because
# we didn't install the actual entry point from setup.py, don't use the
# pkg_resources API.
from pip import main
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.exit(main())
And then I think that it was not in the installation path. So I cd into the python3-pip, like this:
cd /.local/lib/python3.5/site-packages/pip
P.S.: you have to cd into the right directions in your computer
Then I cat the file to see the differences(you can use other operations to see the code):
cat __main__.py
And I saw this:
from __future__ import absolute_import
import os
import sys
# If we are running from a wheel, add the wheel to sys.path
# This allows the usage python pip-*.whl/pip install pip-*.whl
if __package__ == '':
# __file__ is pip-*.whl/pip/__main__.py
# first dirname call strips of '/__main__.py', second strips off '/pip'
# Resulting path is the name of the wheel itself
# Add that to sys.path so we can import pip
path = os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(__file__))
sys.path.insert(0, path)
from pip._internal import main as _main # isort:skip # noqa
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.exit(_main())
So, can you see the difference? I can figure out that I have to make the file the same as the file in /usr/bin/pip3
So, I copied the code in /.local/lib/python3.5/site-packages/pip to replace the code in /usr/bin/pip3
and the problem disappear!
P.S.: pip3 or pip have no difference in this problem.
I will be happy if my solution solve your problem!
This Worked for me !
hash -r pip # or hash -d pip
Now, uninstall the pip installed version and reinstall it using the following commands.
python -m pip uninstall pip # sudo
sudo apt install --reinstall python-pip
If pip is broken, use:
python -m pip install --force-reinstall pip
Hope it helps!
I used the following code to load a module that might need install, thus avoiding this error (which I also got) - using the latest Python and latest pip with no problem
try
from colorama import Fore, Back, Style
except:
!pip install colorama
from colorama import Fore, Back, Style
import main from pip._internal
from pip._internal import main
Edit the pip code from
sudo nano /usr/bin/pip3
As #cryptoboy said - check what pip/python version you have installed
demon#UbuntuHP:~$ pip -V
demon#UbuntuHP:~$ pip2 -V
demon#UbuntuHP:~$ pip3 -V
and then check for no-needed libraries in your .local/lib/ folder.
I did backup of settings when I was migrating to newer Kubuntu and in had .local/lib/python2.7/ folder in my home directory. Installed python 3.6. I just removed the old folder and now everything works great!
On Debian you will need to update apt first....
sudo apt-get update -qq
sudo apt-get install python-pip -qq
sudo pip install pip --upgrade --quiet
sudo pip2 install virtualenv --quiet
If you skip 'sudo apt-get update -qq' your pip will become corrupt and display the 'cannot find main' error.
I just installed python 2.7 and also pip to the 2.7 site package.
When I get the version with:
pip -V
It shows:
pip 1.3.1 from /usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages (python 2.6)
How do I use the 2.7 version of pip located at:
/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages
There should be a binary called "pip2.7" installed at some location included within your $PATH variable.
You can find that out by typing
which pip2.7
This should print something like '/usr/local/bin/pip2.7' to your stdout. If it does not print anything like this, it is not installed. In that case, install it by running
$ wget https://bootstrap.pypa.io/pip/2.7/get-pip.py
$ sudo python2.7 get-pip.py
Now, you should be all set, and
which pip2.7
should return the correct output.
An alternative is to call the pip module by using python2.7, as below:
python2.7 -m pip <commands>
For example, you could run python2.7 -m pip install <package> to install your favorite python modules. Here is a reference: https://stackoverflow.com/a/50017310/4256346.
In case the pip module has not yet been installed for this version of python, you can run the following:
python2.7 -m ensurepip
Running this command will "bootstrap the pip installer". Note that running this may require administrative privileges (i.e. sudo). Here is a reference: https://docs.python.org/2.7/library/ensurepip.html and another reference https://stackoverflow.com/a/46631019/4256346.
as noted here, this is what worked best for me:
sudo apt-get install python3 python3-pip python3-setuptools
sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/python python /usr/bin/python3 10
pip has now dropped support for python2, therefore you can't use python2 pip
You can't find python2-pip in apt-get anymore, and you won't get pip when installing python2 from source
You can still install python modules using apt-get. To install a python prepend ‘python-’ to the module name
apt-get install python-six # install six
I have both python2.7 and python3.2 installed in Ubuntu 12.04.
The symbolic link python links to python2.7.
When I type:
sudo pip install package-name
It will default install python2 version of package-name.
Some package supports both python2 and python3.
How to install python3 version of package-name via pip?
Ubuntu 12.10+ and Fedora 13+ have a package called python3-pip which will install pip-3.2 (or pip-3.3, pip-3.4 or pip3 for newer versions) without needing this jumping through hoops.
I came across this and fixed this without needing the likes of wget or virtualenvs (assuming Ubuntu 12.04):
Install package python3-setuptools: run sudo aptitude install python3-setuptools, this will give you the command easy_install3.
Install pip using Python 3's setuptools: run sudo easy_install3 pip, this will give you the command pip-3.2 like kev's solution.
Install your PyPI packages: run sudo pip-3.2 install <package> (installing python packages into your base system requires root, of course).
…
Profit!
You may want to build a virtualenv of python3, then install packages of python3 after activating the virtualenv. So your system won't be messed up :)
This could be something like:
virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python3 py3env
source py3env/bin/activate
pip install package-name
Short Answer
sudo apt-get install python3-pip
sudo pip3 install MODULE_NAME
Source: Shashank Bharadwaj's comment
Long Answer
The short answer applies only on newer systems. On some versions of Ubuntu the command is pip-3.2:
sudo pip-3.2 install MODULE_NAME
If it doesn't work, this method should work for any Linux distro and supported version:
sudo apt-get install curl
curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py | sudo python3
sudo pip3 install MODULE_NAME
If you don't have curl, use wget. If you don't have sudo, switch to root. If pip3 symlink does not exists, check for something like pip-3.X
Much python packages require also the dev package, so install it too:
sudo apt-get install python3-dev
Sources:
python installing packages with pip
Pip latest install
Check also Tobu's answer if you want an even more upgraded version of Python.
I want to add that using a virtual environment is usually the preferred way to develop a python application, so #felixyan answer is probably the best in an ideal world. But if you really want to install that package globally, or if need to test / use it frequently without activating a virtual environment, I suppose installing it as a global package is the way to go.
Well, on ubuntu 13.10/14.04, things are a little different.
Install
$ sudo apt-get install python3-pip
Install packages
$ sudo pip3 install packagename
NOT pip-3.3 install
The easiest way to install latest pip2/pip3 and corresponding packages:
curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py | python2
pip2 install package-name
curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py | python3
pip3 install package-name
Note: please run these commands as root
I had the same problem while trying to install pylab, and I have found this link
So what I have done to install pylab within Python 3 is:
python3 -m pip install SomePackage
It has worked properly, and as you can see in the link you can do this for every Python version you have, so I guess this solves your problem.
Old question, but none of the answers satisfies me. One of my systems is running Ubuntu 12.04 LTS and for some reason there's no package python3-pip or python-pip for Python 3. So here is what I've done (all commands were executed as root):
Install setuptools for Python3 in case you haven't.
apt-get install python3-setuptools
or
aptitude install python3-setuptools
With Python 2.4+ you can invoke easy_install with specific Python version by using python -m easy_install. So pip for Python 3 could be installed by:
python3 -m easy_install pip
That's it, you got pip for Python 3. Now just invoke pip with the specific version of Python to install package for Python 3. For example, with Python 3.2 installed on my system, I used:
pip-3.2 install [package]
If you have pip installed in both pythons, and both are in your path, just use:
$ pip-2.7 install PACKAGENAME
$ pip-3.2 install PACKAGENAME
References:
http://www.pip-installer.org/docs/pip/en/0.8.3/news.html#id4
https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/200
This is a duplicate of question #2812520
If your system has python2 as default, use below command to install packages to python3
$ python3 -m pip install <package-name>
Easy enough:
sudo aptitude install python3-pip
pip-3.2 install --user pkg
If you want Python 3.3, which isn't the default as of Ubuntu 12.10:
sudo aptitude install python3-pip python3.3
python3.3 -m pip.runner install --user pkg
You can alternatively just run pip3 install packagename instead of pip,
Firstly, you need to install pip for the Python 3 installation that you want. Then you run that pip to install packages for that Python version.
Since you have both pip and python 3 in /usr/bin, I assume they are both installed with a package manager of some sort. That package manager should also have a Python 3 pip. That's the one you should install.
Felix' recommendation of virtualenv is a good one. If you are only testing, or you are doing development, then you shouldn't install the package in the system python. Using virtualenv, or even building your own Pythons for development, is better in those cases.
But if you actually do want to install this package in the system python, installing pip for Python 3 is the way to go.
Although the question relates to Ubuntu, let me contribute by saying that I'm on Mac and my python command defaults to Python 2.7.5. I have Python 3 as well, accessible via python3, so knowing the pip package origin, I just downloaded it and issued sudo python3 setup.py install against it and, surely enough, only Python 3 has now this module inside its site packages. Hope this helps a wandering Mac-stranger.
Execute the pip binary directly.
First locate the version of PIP you want.
jon-mint python3.3 # whereis ip
ip: /bin/ip /sbin/ip /usr/share/man/man8/ip.8.gz /usr/share/man/man7/ip.7.gz
Then execute.
jon-mint python3.3 # pip3.3 install pexpect
Downloading/unpacking pexpect
Downloading pexpect-3.2.tar.gz (131kB): 131kB downloaded
Running setup.py (path:/tmp/pip_build_root/pexpect/setup.py) egg_info for package pexpect
Installing collected packages: pexpect
Running setup.py install for pexpect
Successfully installed pexpect
Cleaning up...
You should install ALL dependencies:
sudo apt-get install build-essential python3-dev python3-setuptools python3-numpy python3-scipy libatlas-dev libatlas3gf-base
Install pip3(if you have installed, please look step 3):
sudo apt-get install python3-pip
Iinstall scikit-learn by pip3
pip3 install -U scikit-learn
Open your terminal and entry python3 environment, type import sklearn to check it.
To install pip for python3 use should use pip3 instead of pip.
To install python in ubuntu 18.08 bionic
before installing a version of python, activate virtual environment so that it won't have any problem in a future versions of python.
virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python3 py3env
source py3env/bin/activate
then install the actual python version you want.
>> sudo apt-get install python3.7
To install the required pip package in ubuntu
>> sudo apt-get install python3-pip
You Can Simply type in terminal/console .
Commands
sudo apt update
sudo apt upgrade
sudo apt install python3-pip3
pip3 install package-name
Another way to install python3 is using wget. Below are the steps for installation.
wget http://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.3.5/Python-3.3.5.tar.xz
tar xJf ./Python-3.3.5.tar.xz
cd ./Python-3.3.5
./configure --prefix=/opt/python3.3
make && sudo make install
Also,one can create an alias for the same using
echo 'alias py="/opt/python3.3/bin/python3.3"' >> ~/.bashrc
Now open a new terminal and type py and press Enter.