pip usually live in C:\Python2x\Scripts
. You will need to add that to your path as well. Then you should be able to call pip from the command line. Just try opening cmd.exe
and type pip and then enter. It should print out a bunch of helpful information about pip. If it just gives you an unrecognized command, then you probably added it to the path incorrectly.
You can also run pip like this:
c:\Python27\pip.exe install somePackage
If you're running cmd.exe as an admin user, this should work just fine. When I have downloaded a package that I want to install with pip, I usually open cmd.exe
and then change directory to the file's location. So on your command line, you would do something like this:
cd c:\path\to\cpplint
Now that you're in the right location you can run dir
to get a listing of what's in that folder. This is a good sanity check as sometimes when you unzip a package, there's a subfolder you need to navigate into to get at the setup.py
script. If you see the setup.py, go up one level and do the following:
c:\Python27\Scripts\pip.exe install -e directoryName
See Can I use `pip` instead of `easy_install` for `python setup.py install` dependency resolution?
Alternatively, you can go into the folder with setup.py
and just run the following, skipping pip entirely:
python setup.py install
Finally, you can also use pip to install from the zipped download:
pip install c:\path\to\zipped\package
See also: