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I just started setting up a CentOS server today and noticed that the default version of Python on CentOS is set to 2.6.6. I want to use Python 2.7 instead. I googled around and found that 2.6.6 is used by system tools such as YUM so I should not tamper with it. Then I opened up a terminal on my Mac and found that I had Python 2.6.8 and 2.7.5 and 3.3.3 installed.

Sorry for the long story. In short I just want to know how to look up all the versions of Python installed on CentOS so I don't accidentally install it twice.

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14 Answers 14

175

The more easy way its by executing the next command:

ls -ls /usr/bin/python*

Output look like this:

/usr/bin/python           /usr/bin/python2.7        /usr/bin/pythonw
/usr/bin/python-config    /usr/bin/python2.7-config /usr/bin/pythonw2.7
9
  • 2
    This answer is not very specific, please edit it to clarify the intention.
    – Maurice
    Commented Aug 23, 2016 at 12:44
  • 1
    This one did it for me. which python etc only give me the current version in use, not the other installed ones.
    – dorien
    Commented Feb 28, 2017 at 5:30
  • 47
    Careful, some could be installed in usr/local too. So run this too. ls -ls /usr/local/bin/python* Commented Dec 5, 2017 at 20:17
  • 2
    For OSX users, python2.7 comes pre-installed in /usr/bin/ but any python versions that were downloaded and installed by a user are likely in /usr/local/bin/ (see OutOnAWeekend's comment). Commented Oct 12, 2018 at 22:10
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    This would also miss anything in anaconda. To me, it sounds like the original question is how do you do this for your entire system, not just in usr/bin
    – Otherness
    Commented Apr 12, 2020 at 1:43
31

we can directly use this to see all the pythons installed both by current user and the root by the following: whereis python

1
  • This does not show the various python versions installed in /usr
    – cpowr
    Commented May 31 at 22:46
20

Here is a cleaner way to show them (technically without symbolic links). This includes python2 and python3 installs:

ls -1 /usr/bin/python* | grep '.*[2-3]\(.[0-9]\+\)\?$'

Where grep filters the output of ls that that has that numeric pattern at the end ($).

Or using find:

find /usr/bin/python* ! -type l

Which shows all the different (!) of symbolic link type (-type l).

16

Find out which version of Python is installed by issuing the command python --version: $ python --version Python 2.7.10

If you see something like this, Python 2.7 is your default version. You can also see if you have Python 3 installed:

$ python3 --version
Python 3.7.2

If you also want to know the path where it is installed, you can issue the command "which" with python and python3:

$ which python
/usr/bin/python

$ which python3
/usr/local/bin/python3
7

Use,

yum list installed
command to find the packages you installed.

3
  • It doesn't give the list of python installed in the system. SO want python versions, not the list of packages. The @gabriel answer is good according to me. You can also use "whereis python" . it also gives the list of python on my centos and Mac system. Commented Dec 12, 2018 at 12:26
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    In that case you can do yum list installed | grep python Commented Dec 13, 2018 at 13:03
  • Bro already has done. Now it is showing list python packages NOT list of python versions Commented Dec 13, 2018 at 13:19
7

COMMAND: python --version && python3 --version

OUTPUT:

Python 2.7.10
Python 3.7.1

ALIAS COMMAND: pyver

OUTPUT:

Python 2.7.10
Python 3.7.1

You can make an alias like "pyver" in your .bashrc file or else using a text accelerator like AText maybe.

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  • 1
    This assumes that the user knows they have python2.x and python3.x. What if they have anaconda and want to see those versions? This isn't general enough be be helpful.
    – Otherness
    Commented Apr 12, 2020 at 1:40
5

As someone mentioned in a comment, you can use which python if it is supported by CentOS. Another command that could work is whereis python. In the event neither of these work, you can start the Python interpreter, and it will show you the version, or you could look in /usr/bin for the Python files (python, python3 etc).

1
  • Best option for me on CentOS 7 -- I had another python 3.10 installed at /usr/local not /usr/bin Commented Oct 23, 2023 at 17:09
5

To find what versions of python are installed use a whereis command.

$ whereis python | tr ' ' '\n' | grep ^/ | sort

this will show not only system versions installed in /usr directory but also versions installed by pyenv tool.

/etc/python2.7
/etc/python3.10
/etc/python3.8
/etc/python3.9
/home/user/.pyenv/shims/python
/home/user/.pyenv/shims/python3.11
/home/user/.pyenv/shims/python3.11-config
/home/user/.pyenv/shims/python3.9
/usr/bin/python
/usr/bin/python2.7
/usr/bin/python3.10
/usr/bin/python3.10-config
/usr/bin/python3.8
/usr/bin/python3.8-config
/usr/bin/python3.9
/usr/bin/python3.9-config
/usr/include/python3.10
/usr/include/python3.8
/usr/include/python3.9
/usr/lib/python2.7
/usr/lib/python3.10
/usr/lib/python3.8
/usr/lib/python3.9
/usr/local/bin/python3.6
/usr/local/bin/python3.6m
/usr/local/bin/python3.6m-config
/usr/local/lib/python2.7
/usr/local/lib/python3.10
/usr/local/lib/python3.6
/usr/local/lib/python3.8
/usr/local/lib/python3.9
/usr/share/info/python3.9
/usr/share/python
4
compgen -c python | grep -P '^python\d'

This lists some other python things too, But hey, You can identify all python versions among them.

3

It depends on your default version of python setup. You can query by Python Version:

python3 --version //to check which version of python3 is installed on your computer
python2 --version // to check which version of python2 is installed on your computer
python --version // it shows your default Python installed version.
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ls -l /usr/bin/python* & ls -l /usr/local/bin/python*
1

Sift through the output of this script.

sudo find / -name 'python*' -type f  -exec du -h {}  + | sort -r -h ~/Documents/python_locations.txt
0

I would add to @nurealam siddiq answer,

python --version // it shows your default Python installed version.

python2 --version // to check which version of python2 is installed 

python3 --version //to check which version of python3 is installed 

python3.X --version // to further check which python3.X is installed

0

To check python versions installed in your OS you can run the below commands:-

python2 -version
python3 -version

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