pip module not found

Barry barry at barrys-emacs.org
Fri May 12 13:45:21 EDT 2023



> On 12 May 2023, at 18:31, Thomas Passin <list1 at tompassin.net> wrote:
> 
> On 5/12/2023 11:18 AM, Thomas Passin wrote:
>>> On 5/12/2023 2:42 AM, David John wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>> I recently have been experiencing issues with the pip installation module.
>>> I have python version 3.11 installed. I've checked the directory installed
>>> in the systems variables window and nothing is amiss. Kindly assist.
>> It would be useful if you told us what operating system you are using and how you installed Python.
>> Many if not most Linux distributions do not include pip by default. Usually the package manager as a version to install.  On systems based on Debian, you can install pip with:
>> sudo apt install python3-pip
>> On others, you will have to look around in the package manager or search on line.
>> As a last resort, if you cannot find an OS package manager way to install pip, you find out how from here:
>> https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/installation/
>> As the link says, you can run from a command line:
>> <python> -m ensurepip --upgrade
>> NOTE: instead of <python>, use the command that launches the right version of python on your system  On Windows, this is usually py.  On Linux, it is usually python3.
> 
> On Linux, if you want tkinter, you may have to install it with the package manager too.  On Debian-related systems:
> 
> sudo apt-get install python3-tk
> 
> For the Yum package manager:
> 
> yum install tkinter
> 
> You may also need to install ImageTk:
> 
> sudo apt-get install python3-pil.imagetk  (Debian-based)
> 
> On Centos/Red Hat derived systems, you will also need to install
> 
> python3-pillow
> python3-pillow-tk
> 

PIP not PIL is the topic right?

We still need OP to tell us which OS and where python came from.

Barry

> 
> 
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