I am on a school computer, so I can't install anything.

I am trying to create C code which can be run in Python. It seems all the articles I am finding on it require you to use

#include <Python.h>

I do this, but when I compile it complains that there is no such file or directory.

The computer has Python (at least it has the python command in the terminal, and we can run whatever Python code we want).

I typed in locate Python.h in the terminal, but it found nothing.

I have two questions:

  1. Can I write C code that I can call in Python without Python.h?

  2. Am I missing something, and the computer actually has Python.h?

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Call someone and ask them to download it and email it to you. Then place it wherever you want on the machine. – Hunter McMillen Nov 26 '11 at 22:57
5  
@HunterMcMillen: That won't solve much, as Python.h includes a bunch of other files. Also, you need the exact Python.h that matches the system's Python version. – Petr Viktorin Nov 26 '11 at 23:02

11 Answers 11

You need python-dev installed.
For Ubuntu :
sudo apt-get install python-dev # for python2.x installs sudo apt-get install python3-dev # for python3.x installs
For more distros, refer -
https://stackoverflow.com/a/21530768/6841045

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It happens because Python.h is not located in the default include folder (which is /usr/include/ ).

Installing Python-dev might help:

$ sudo apt-get install python-dev 

But mostly the problem will persist because the development packages are made inside a separate folder inside the include folder itself ( /usr/include/python2.7 or python3).

So you should either specify the library folder using -I option in gcc or by creating soft-links to everything inside those folders to just outside (I'd prefer the former option).

Using -I option in gcc:

$ gcc -o hello -I /usr/include/python2.7 helloworld.c

Creating soft-links :

$ sudo ln -sv /usr/include/python2.7/* /usr/include/
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That means you are not install libraries for python dev.

If you are on Linux OS, you can solve this issue by commands separately below:

  • Ubuntu (Debian) :

    sudo apt-get install python-dev (Py2) or sudo apt-get install python3-dev (Py3)

  • Rehat (CentOS):

    yum install python-devel

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For Ubuntu 15.10 and Python 3, comming to this question as they don't have Python.h but having administrative rights, the following might solve it:

sudo apt-get install python-dev
sudo apt-get install python3-dev
sudo apt-get install libpython3-dev
sudo apt-get install libpython3.4-dev
sudo apt-get install libpython3.5-dev
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1  
it works for ubuntu 16.04, too :) thank you, Martin! – fanny Apr 20 '17 at 16:31
    
sudo apt-get install libpython3.6-dev solved it for me. Thanks! – Shawn Anderson yesterday

I ran into the same issue while trying to build a very old copy of omniORB on a CentOS 7 machine. Resolved the issue by installing the python development libraries:

# yum install python-devel

This installed the Python.h into:

/usr/include/python2.7/Python.h

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You have to use #include "python2.7/Python.h" instead of #include "Python.h".

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Once you know where and how are the libs stored that makes more sense, nevermind to get a machine-produced file with no path specified :D – erm3nda Mar 29 '17 at 1:25

The header files are now provided by libpython2.7-dev.

You can use the search form at packages.ubuntu.com to find out what package provides Python.h.

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This solved it for me on a newly launched Ubuntu instance on AWS. sudo apt-get install libpython2.7-dev – RDK May 21 '14 at 19:31

On ubuntu you can just type sudo apt-get install python-dev -y in terminal to install the python-dev package.

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1  
The OP says they're on a school computer, so sudo apt-get probably isn't available to them. – GreenMatt Jan 7 '15 at 20:45

On Ubuntu, you would need to install a package called python-dev. Since this package doesn't seem to be installed (locate Python.h didn't find anything) and you can't install it system-wide yourself, we need a different solution.

You can install Python in your home directory -- you don't need any special permissions to do this. If you are allowed to use a web browser and run a gcc, this should work for you. To this end

  1. Download the source tarball.

  2. Unzip with

    tar xjf Python-2.7.2.tar.bz2
    
  3. Build and install with

    cd Python-2.7.2
    ./configure --prefix=/home/username/python --enable-unicode=ucs4
    make
    make install
    

Now, you have a complete Python installation in your home directory. Pass -I /home/username/python/include to gcc when compiling to make it aware of Python.h. Pass -L /home/username/python/lib and -lpython2.7 when linking.

share|improve this answer
    
well, it mostly works. I am getting this error now: /home/pdem/python/Include/Python.h:8:22: error: pyconfig.h: No such file or directory....btw the computer is running python version 2.6.5...does that make a difference? thanks! – user979344 Nov 26 '11 at 23:15
    
@user979344: I don't know the reason for the error message. The capital I in your path surprise me a bit -- you should use the Python.h from where you installed Python, not from where you unpacked the tarball. The Python version that was already installed does not matter -- you are installing your own Python, any version you want. It can coexist with the system-wide installation. – Sven Marnach Nov 27 '11 at 0:10
    
python/Lib contains the Python modules of the stdlib. I think you mean -L...python/Python/, which contains some .c and .o files. – Jonathan Hartley Jul 21 '13 at 8:14
2  
@JonathanHartley: No, I meant exactly what I wrote. You are confusing the path Lib/ in the source distribution with the path $prefix/lib of the installed software. – Sven Marnach Jul 24 '13 at 10:03
    
@SvenMarnach aha! I see. Thanks. – Jonathan Hartley Jul 24 '13 at 10:12

Go to Synaptic package manager. Reload -> Search for python -> select the python package you want -> Submit -> Install Works for me ;)

Exactly, the package you need to install is python-dev.

share|improve this answer
    
The questioner has stated that they are unable to install new packages on the system. – Andrew Marsh Nov 26 '11 at 22:59

You need the python-dev package which contains Python.h

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4  
I have installed python-dev in ubuntu 12.04 and get a /usr/include/python2.7 area but no python.h file exists in there. Any ideas? – Jesse Pepper Oct 3 '12 at 7:31
    
you saved my life – oiyio Dec 4 '14 at 12:26
1  
Some cases the package is called python-devel x) – Werner Aug 12 '15 at 11:06

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