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I am a non-programmer who started to learn Python. My Mac OS X Yosemite shipped with Python 2.7.6. I installed Python 3.4.2 too. If I use pip or easy_install in the terminal to install a package, how do I know which Python I installed the package in? It seems Python 3.4.2 shipped with pip and easy_install, but I think Python 2.7.6 may also have some version of pip or easy_install. I know my system can have both versions of Python, but can it have multiple versions of pip or easy_install?

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  • Yes, it can have multiple versions of each. which pip should list the path to the executable which is the default in your $PATH and it will probably be obvious which installation it belongs to.
    – Brian Cain
    Nov 17, 2014 at 4:20
  • @BrianCain yes, but it might be located in /usr/local/bin, for example, so that wouldn't give much info...
    – MattDMo
    Nov 17, 2014 at 4:21
  • ...ok, right, I wasn't verbose enough -- readlink $(which pip) etc
    – Brian Cain
    Nov 17, 2014 at 4:22

2 Answers 2

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There's an easy way around it - use pip2 or pip2.7 or pip-2.7 for Python 2, and pip3 or pip3.4 or pip-3.4 for Python 3. Both version ship with easy_install, but Python 2 does not contain pip by default - you have to install it yourself.

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  • thanks, what you said is right for my condition,I find only my python 3.4.2 has a pip3, my python 2.7.6 which shipped with yosemite did not have pip, that means if I Type "pip3 install somepakage", I will install that package to python 3.4.2, the python tutorial books I read tend to use easy_install, if I type "easy_instal" in my terminal, will I install the package into 2.7.6 or 3.4.2 ? maybe I can try it, but I'm afraid to ruin my terminal.
    – Sniper_3B
    Nov 18, 2014 at 9:09
  • @Sniper_3B I wouldn't use easy_install at all, mostly b/c you can't uninstall with it, and it's quite outdated. Follow the instructions here to download get-pip.py, then install it with Python 2. You'll now be able to install packages into both versions, using pip2 for Py2 and pip3 for Py3.
    – MattDMo
    Nov 18, 2014 at 15:39
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pip -V

to find the default python version

If you have multiple versions, they will usually be named pip2 for Python2, pip3 for Python3 etc

You really shouldn't be using easy_install anymore

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  • I find I can type pip3, but not pip, because the python 2.7.6 shipped with Mac OS X may not include pip, but the 3.4.2 I download from the Python dot org include pip3, but for easy_install, it make no sense to type easy_install3 or easy_install2, to keep coherent with the python tutorial books I read, if I type "easy_install somepakage", will I install it to 2.7.6 or 3.4.2?
    – Sniper_3B
    Nov 18, 2014 at 9:25

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