Coexistence of Python 2.x and 3.x on same OS

Mark Lawrence breamoreboy at yahoo.co.uk
Fri Oct 5 08:29:13 EDT 2012


On 05/10/2012 13:15, Edward Diener wrote:
> On 10/1/2012 12:02 PM, Alister wrote:
>> On Sun, 30 Sep 2012 15:14:17 -0400, Edward Diener wrote:
>>
>>> Has there been any official software that allows both the Python 2.x and
>>> 3.x releases to coexist on the same OS so that the end-user can easily
>>> switch between them when invoking Python scripts after each has been
>>> installed to their own directories/folders ?
>>>
>>> I know of some unoffical solutions, but they require lots of tweaks.
>>> Given the vagaries of the different OSs on which Python can run I am
>>> hoping for some offical solution which will work on any of the most
>>> popular OSs ( Windows, Linux, Mac ).
>>>
>>> The situation is so confusing on Windows, where the file associations,
>>> registry entries, and other internal software which allows a given
>>> Python release to work properly when invoking Python is so complicated,
>>> that I have given up on trying to install more than one Python release
>>> and finding a relaible, foolproof way of switching between them. So
>>> although I would like to use the latest 3.x series on Windows I have
>>> decide to stick with the latest 2.x series instead because much software
>>> using Python does not support 3.x yet.
>>
>> on my fedora system it was a simple matter of:-
>> #> yum install python3
>>
>> to use python 3 i specify it in my shebang line
>>
>> #!/usr/bun/env python3
>>
>> Simple
>>
>> Not sure about Windoze though (Although from memory the install asks
>> where to install so should not be a major issue)
>
> Windows installs of Python do not distinguish releases by Pythonx(.x)
> but just install different versions of Python in different directories.
> However one can make links to the different versions based on their
> release numbers, and that would allow a shebang line work if it was
> supported.
>
>

Please read this http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0397/ and let us 
know whether or not it fits your needs on Windows.

-- 
Cheers.

Mark Lawrence.




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