This answer assumes your environment is Linux, Unix or something similar.
If your problem is the PATH
environment variable not pointing at the correct binary, then modify that PATH
: make it include a given directory, e.g. ~/bin
, by executing PATH=${HOME}/bin:${PATH}
from one of your profile files, e.g. ~/.profile
. Make sure to create that directory, and have it contain a symlink named python
pointing to the correct version of Python.
This won't help for scripts which have a hardcoded path, e.g. start with #!/usr/bin/python
. When you call these directly from the command line, you can simply call the interpreter (i.e. python
) instead, passing the name of the script as an argument: python /path/to/script.py
. You can even use the python version you want in its place, i.e. python2.7 /path/to/script.py
.
You might also turn this whole sequence into a script in your ~/bin
directory, e.g. have ~/bin/foo
contain the following content:
#!/bin/sh
exec ${HOME}/bin/python2.7 /usr/bin/foo
Don't forget to chmod -x ~/bin/foo
the file. You get an executable shell script which on your PATH
comes before the default version installed on your system. The script will then call that default version, using a very specific interpreter. So now you can simply type the short name, and have the official script executed by your desired python version.
It might happen that some other script attempt to execute a given python script using its absolute path name. In that case, no modification of the PATH
will help. You'll have to modify the first line of the script in question to read e.g. to #!/usr/bin/env python
. If you cannot control those scripts, you are in trouble, and will need more advanced hacks to tweak the system into doing something it usually wouldn't do. LD_PRELOAD
comes to mind.