I need to find which version of TensorFlow I have installed. I'm using Ubuntu 16.04 Long Term Support.
20 Answers
This depends on how you installed TensorFlow. I am going to use the same headings used by TensorFlow's installation instructions to structure this answer.
Pip installation
Run:
python -c 'import tensorflow as tf; print(tf.__version__)' # for Python 2
python3 -c 'import tensorflow as tf; print(tf.__version__)' # for Python 3
Note that python
is symlinked to /usr/bin/python3
in some Linux distributions, so use python
instead of python3
in these cases.
pip list | grep tensorflow
for Python 2 or pip3 list | grep tensorflow
for Python 3 will also show the version of Tensorflow installed.
Virtualenv installation
Run:
python -c 'import tensorflow as tf; print(tf.__version__)' # for both Python 2 and Python 3
pip list | grep tensorflow
will also show the version of Tensorflow installed.
For example, I have installed TensorFlow 0.9.0 in a virtualenv
for Python 3. So, I get:
$ python -c 'import tensorflow as tf; print(tf.__version__)'
0.9.0
$ pip list | grep tensorflow
tensorflow (0.9.0)
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4and if you are building from source, your version is commit hash from
git rev-parse HEAD
Jul 26, 2016 at 4:53 -
6Got
'module' object has no attribute '__version__'
whenpython -c 'import tensorflow as tf; print(tf.__version__)'
Dec 9, 2016 at 2:53 -
1@user3768495 If you installed Tensorflow with VirtualEnv you need to activate the environment and that must be done for any new console you open (source ~/tensorflow/bin/activate). Once you do that you can retrieve your tensorflow version (pip list | grep tensorflow) Mar 18, 2018 at 14:29
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8for Windows CMD you need to use double quote
"
instead of'
:python3 -c "import tensorflow as tf; print(tf.__version__)"
– user924Dec 15, 2018 at 19:46 -
2[jalal@goku examples]$ python -c 'import tensorflow as tf; print(tf.__version__)' Traceback (most recent call last): File "<string>", line 1, in <module> AttributeError: module 'tensorflow' has no attribute 'version' Dec 8, 2019 at 1:41
Almost every normal package in python assigns the variable .__version__
to the current version. So if you want to find the version of some package you can do the following
import a
a.__version__
For tensorflow it will be
import tensorflow as tf
tf.version.VERSION
For old versions of tensorflow (below 0.10), use tf.__version__
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11tf.VERSION doesn't work for TF2.0. However, tf.__version__ works fine. Oct 9, 2019 at 22:38
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1
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I've installed 'tensorflow-cpu==2.4.1' on my venv and opened jupyter notebook after activating venv. When I do "!pip freeze" it show tensorflow-cpu==2.4.1 correctly however when I run tf.__version__ it tells me I have version 2.7.0. May 12, 2022 at 6:03
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looks like even for TF2.0 both works for me, tf.__version__ as well as tf.version.VERSION Sep 2, 2022 at 7:05
If you have installed via pip, just run the following
$ pip show tensorflow
Name: tensorflow
Version: 1.5.0
Summary: TensorFlow helps the tensors flow
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2
pip show tensorflow-gpu
for GPU version. Better yet, just dopip list | grep tensorflow
. Jun 28, 2019 at 6:40 -
1
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Fun fact: I just realized why this package is called tensorflow thanks to your answer! Sep 17, 2022 at 5:46
import tensorflow as tf
print(tf.VERSION)
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1
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print() with parentheses is a python3 thing, not necessary for python2. Jul 5, 2018 at 1:43
For python 3.6.2:
import tensorflow as tf
print(tf.version.VERSION)
If you're using anaconda distribution of Python,
$ conda list | grep tensorflow
tensorflow 1.0.0 py35_0 conda-forge
To check it using Jupyter Notebook (IPython Notebook)
In [1]: import tensorflow as tf
In [2]: tf.__version__
Out[2]: '1.0.0'
For knowing any version of the python library then if your library is installed using the pip then use the following command.
pip show tensorflow
The Output of the above command will be shown below:-
Name: tensorflow
Version: 2.3.0
Summary: TensorFlow is an open source machine learning framework for everyone.
Home-page: https://www.tensorflow.org/
Author: Google Inc.
Author-email: [email protected]
License: Apache 2.0
Location: /usr/local/lib/python3.6/dist-packages
Requires: astunparse, wheel, keras-preprocessing, gast, tensorflow-estimator, opt-einsum, tensorboard, protobuf, absl-py, six, wrapt, termcolor, numpy, grpcio, scipy, google-pasta, h5py
Required-by: fancyimpute
I installed the Tensorflow 0.12rc from source, and the following command gives me the version info:
python -c 'import tensorflow as tf; print(tf.__version__)' # for Python 2
python3 -c 'import tensorflow as tf; print(tf.__version__)' # for Python 3
The following figure shows the output:
To get more information about tensorflow and its options you can use below command:
>> import tensorflow as tf
>> help(tf)
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1I get python3.6 -c 'import tensorflow as tf; help(tf)' Segmentation fault (core dumped) Aug 27, 2018 at 5:52
On Latest TensorFlow release 1.14.0
tf.VERSION
is deprecated, instead of this use
tf.version.VERSION
ERROR:
WARNING: Logging before flag parsing goes to stderr.
The name tf.VERSION is deprecated. Please use tf.version.VERSION instead.
Easily get KERAS and TENSORFLOW version number --> Run this command in terminal:
[username@usrnm:~] python3
>>import keras; print(keras.__version__)
Using TensorFlow backend.
2.2.4
>>import tensorflow as tf; print(tf.__version__)
1.12.0
The tensorflow version can be checked either on terminal or console or in any IDE editer as well (like Spyder or Jupyter notebook, etc)
Simple command to check version:
(py36) C:\WINDOWS\system32>python
Python 3.6.8 |Anaconda custom (64-bit)
>>> import tensorflow as tf
>>> tf.__version__
'1.13.1'
Another variation, i guess :P
python3 -c 'print(__import__("tensorflow").__version__)'
python -c 'import tensorflow as tf; print(tf.__version__)' # for Python 2
python3 -c 'import tensorflow as tf; print(tf.__version__)' # for Python 3
Here -c represents program passed in as string (terminates option list)
If you have TensorFlow 2.x:
sess = tf.compat.v1.Session(config=tf.compat.v1.ConfigProto(log_device_placement=True))
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1Why provide a partial answer to a 4 y/o question that already has multiple answers with very good acceptance? Does this provide any new knowledge? Jun 5, 2020 at 15:27
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@amitai, all packages and tools upgrade, and most of the time, errors are coming back. Old correct solutions may not work today. Jun 21, 2020 at 14:58
For Windows cmd
pip list | FINDSTR tensorflow
OR
pip show tensorflow
For Linux
pip list | grep tensorflow
OR
pip show tensorflow
The version of Tensorflow can simply be checked on jupyter notebook using the following simple steps.
import tensorflow as tf
print(tf.__version__) # for Python 3
Since nobody is suggesting this way, you can do the following in the cmd if you installed the package via pip
pip show tensorflow
Printing python version in human readable format
python -c 'import sys; print(".".join(map(str, sys.version_info[:3])))'
pip show [package name]
, eg:pip show tensorflow
,pip show numpy
etc.print(tf.__version__)
tf.__version__
andtf.version.VERSION
? My 0.12.0 installation doesn't support latter.tf.version.VERSION
is a v2.0 API): tensorflow.org/api_docs/python/tf/version