How can I check which version of NumPy I'm using?
17 Answers
import numpy
numpy.version.version
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75
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13Actually
import numpy ; numpy.version.version
. The lack ofimport numpy
through me, an obvious newbie.– mmorrisApr 20, 2012 at 1:20 -
17Since the use of
__version__
in recommended in PEP8 and most packages support__version__
vs the non standardversion.version
I think that this answer should be treated more as a curiosity than an accepted method. Usenumpy.__version__
or<package>.__version__
as Dominic Rodger's answer recommends Parse the version (and create your own version strings) as recommended in PEP 386 / PEP 440.– dawgApr 2, 2014 at 16:09 -
Actually, in NumPy 1.20,
numpy.version.version
is typed, andnumpy.__version__
is not (could be an oversight). Jan 31, 2021 at 16:43
import numpy
print(numpy.__version__)
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66This is the API we numpy developers will support. numpy.version.version is an implementation detail that should not be relied upon. Oct 6, 2009 at 0:18
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1
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for Python 3 and the standard numpy import name use
print(np.__version__)
– DavidNov 9, 2022 at 15:43
From the command line, you can simply issue:
python -c "import numpy; print(numpy.version.version)"
Or:
python -c "import numpy; print(numpy.__version__)"
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1This is actually very nice as it allows you to check the version of numpy even if you have two different versions running on two different versions of python. py -2 -c "import numpy; print(numpy.version.version)" py -3 -c "import numpy; print(numpy.version.version)"– JSWilsonAug 18, 2020 at 20:57
Run:
pip list
Should generate a list of packages. Scroll through to numpy.
...
nbpresent (3.0.2)
networkx (1.11)
nltk (3.2.2)
nose (1.3.7)
notebook (5.0.0)
numba (0.32.0+0.g139e4c6.dirty)
numexpr (2.6.2)
numpy (1.11.3) <--
numpydoc (0.6.0)
odo (0.5.0)
openpyxl (2.4.1)
pandas (0.20.1)
pandocfilters (1.4.1)
....
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1
You can also check if your version is using MKL with:
import numpy
numpy.show_config()
We can use pip freeze
to get any Python package version without opening the Python shell.
pip freeze | grep 'numpy'
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2That only works if you installed numpy via pip, not via brew or apt-get, for example. Aug 2, 2016 at 20:49
If you're using NumPy from the Anaconda distribution, then you can just do:
$ conda list | grep numpy
numpy 1.11.3 py35_0
This gives the Python
version as well.
If you want something fancy, then use numexpr
It gives lot of information as you can see below:
In [692]: import numexpr
In [693]: numexpr.print_versions()
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Numexpr version: 2.6.2
NumPy version: 1.13.3
Python version: 3.6.3 |Anaconda custom (64-bit)|
(default, Oct 13 2017, 12:02:49)
[GCC 7.2.0]
Platform: linux-x86_64
AMD/Intel CPU? True
VML available? False
Number of threads used by default: 8 (out of 48 detected cores)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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2
Simply
pip show numpy
and for pip3
pip3 show numpy
Works on both windows and linux. Should work on mac too if you are using pip.
You can get numpy version using Terminal or a Python code.
In a Terminal (bash) using Ubuntu:
pip list | grep numpy
In python 3.6.7, this code shows the numpy version:
import numpy
print (numpy.version.version)
If you insert this code in the file shownumpy.py, you can compile it:
python shownumpy.py
or
python3 shownumpy.py
I've got this output:
1.16.1
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Just a slight caution that it's possible that you may have python and python 3 both installed with numpy. Then when doing the
pip list | grep numpy
method it will show one of the two (typically the python 3's numpy version). When you run theshownumpy.py
program on both python and python 3, they will show you exactly what version is on each respective python environment.– CalebFeb 22, 2019 at 20:37
Just a slight solution change for checking the version of numpy with Python,
import numpy as np
print("Numpy Version:",np.__version__)
Or,
import numpy as np
print("Numpy Version:",np.version.version)
My projects in PyCharm are currently running version
1.17.4
For Python 3.X print syntax:
python -c "import numpy; print (numpy.version.version)"
Or
python -c "import numpy; print(numpy.__version__)"
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1Exact duplicate of the answer of @meduz . For python 3, it is
print(numpy.__version__)
, notprint numpy.__version__
– francisMar 23, 2016 at 15:02
Pure Python line that can be executed from the terminal (both 2.X and 3.X versions):
python -c "import numpy; print(numpy.version.version)"
If you are already inside Python, then:
import numpy
print(numpy.version.version)
It is good to know the version of numpy
you run, but strictly speaking if you just need to have specific version on your system you can write like this:
pip install numpy==1.14.3
and this will install the version you need and uninstall other versions of numpy
.