I need to run in the same environment a script workflow.py
that use python 2.7 and another script stepA.py
that use python 3.7.
Let suppose that stepA.py
is called from workflow.py
, one possibility is to setup two conda env, one with python2.7 and another with python3.7, run workflow.py
in the py2env and write something like
subprocess.run('bash -c "source activate py3env; stepA.py"', shell=True)
in workflow.py
to launch stepA.py
.
I do not like this solution, instead I would like to modify the first row workflow.py
and stepA.py
by indicating the python version to be used, e.g.
#!/usr/bin/env python2.7
instead of simply
#!/usr/bin/env python
this second solution seems to me more atomic and dry.
I tried something like
$ conda --version
conda 4.7.12
$ conda create -n py3env python=3.8
[...]
$ conda env list
# conda environments:
base * /sto1/ref/miniconda2
py3env /sto1/ref/miniconda2/envs/py3env
$ cat ./test.py
#!/usr/bin/env conda run -n py3env python
import os,sys
print sys.executable
print os.__file__
$ ./test.py
/usr/bin/env: conda run -n pheatmap_1 python: No such file or directory
So the conda run solution seem not working.
What is the proper way to set the environment for inside the script (in the #!
row or with other strategies)?
-n
flag to name the env in theconda run
.conda init
andconda
is defined? Please add how you launch your script. E.g.,./workflow.py
?