I am having trouble with some of pandas functionalities. How do I check what is my installation version?
6 Answers
Check pandas.__version__
:
In [76]: import pandas as pd
In [77]: pd.__version__
Out[77]: '0.12.0-933-g281dc4e'
Pandas also provides a utility function, pd.show_versions()
, which reports the version of its dependencies as well:
In [53]: pd.show_versions(as_json=False)
INSTALLED VERSIONS
------------------
commit: None
python: 2.7.6.final.0
python-bits: 64
OS: Linux
OS-release: 3.13.0-45-generic
machine: x86_64
processor: x86_64
byteorder: little
LC_ALL: None
LANG: en_US.UTF-8
pandas: 0.15.2-113-g5531341
nose: 1.3.1
Cython: 0.21.1
numpy: 1.8.2
scipy: 0.14.0.dev-371b4ff
statsmodels: 0.6.0.dev-a738b4f
IPython: 2.0.0-dev
sphinx: 1.2.2
patsy: 0.3.0
dateutil: 1.5
pytz: 2012c
bottleneck: None
tables: 3.1.1
numexpr: 2.2.2
matplotlib: 1.4.2
openpyxl: None
xlrd: 0.9.3
xlwt: 0.7.5
xlsxwriter: None
lxml: 3.3.3
bs4: 4.3.2
html5lib: 0.999
httplib2: 0.8
apiclient: None
rpy2: 2.5.5
sqlalchemy: 0.9.8
pymysql: None
psycopg2: 2.4.5 (dt dec mx pq3 ext)
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1this seems to be outdated
>>> import pandas as pd >>> pd.__version__ Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> AttributeError: module 'pandas' has no attribute '__version__'
May 26, 2018 at 10:38 -
@jangorecki:
pd.__version__
is defined here. If you are getting anAttributeError
, it seems more likely thatimport pandas as pd
is either importing the wrong module (as could happen if you created a file called pandas.py) or there is some other problem with your installation.– unutbuMay 26, 2018 at 20:20 -
yes problem was that pandas was installed with sudo while python started without sudo. May 27, 2018 at 4:16
Run:
pip list
You should get a list of packages (including pandas) and their versions, e.g.:
beautifulsoup4 (4.5.1)
cycler (0.10.0)
jdcal (1.3)
matplotlib (1.5.3)
numpy (1.11.1)
openpyxl (2.2.0b1)
pandas (0.18.1)
pip (8.1.2)
pyparsing (2.1.9)
python-dateutil (2.2)
python-nmap (0.6.1)
pytz (2016.6.1)
requests (2.11.1)
setuptools (20.10.1)
six (1.10.0)
SQLAlchemy (1.0.15)
xlrd (1.0.0)
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9
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1
Simplest Solution
Code:
import pandas as pd
pd.__version__
**Its double underscore before and after the word "version".
Output:
'0.14.1'
Run
pip freeze
It works the same as above.
pip show pandas
Displays information about a specific package.
For more information, check out pip help
Windows
python -c "import pandas as pd; print(pd.__version__)"
conda list | findstr pandas # Anaconda / Conda
pip freeze | findstr pandas
pip show pandas | findstr Version
Linux
python -c "import pandas as pd; print(pd.__version__)"
conda list | grep numpy # Anaconda / Conda
pip freeze | grep numpy # pip
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In my Jupyter notebook,
pandas.__version__
and!pip freeze | grep pandas
show two different versions. Which version is being used in the notebook? May 12, 2020 at 19:22 -
1
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To filter out packages that include the same name: pip freeze | grep ^pandas==– YanoFeb 27 at 16:32