Mac os python as framework6/16/2023 ![]() But inside VSC it still thinks python is equivalent to python2. If I enter the command 'alias pythonpython3' in a terminal and then enter the command 'python' in that same terminal, the OS invokes python3. ![]() ![]() **warning: I’ve sunk close to 30 hours into troubleshooting this, learning this stuff is a process If you don’t have prior experience with these things, and it seems unexpectedly hopeless. Unfortunately, theres no setting within the VSC extension to point to python3. or if this is not the right approach what the right approach is. So to be explicit, I want to know how to make the terminal in mac use python 3.8 as it’s default so when I download python packages they are the ones for python 3.8, and so I can use the full extent of pythons abilities on my computer, as in applied onto my computer (as thats the only reason I can imagine python is pre-installed as apart of the shell and not exclusively coded in a coding app). How is it done? I am not really open to using something like homebrew, I would rather just create a linux environment if homebrew is the only option, but If my opinions of homebrew are baseless I’d be happy to hear it. Also I know its possible to get (a potentially antiquated version of) pipenv alright without getting python 3 (3.8) integrated but at this point It has become my mission to get it integrated. But after installing the new version, when I open a terminal and run. It is a little older, so I upgrade python to a newer version ( python 3.7 or python 3.9 ). I cannot use any of the tools the python update downloaded from the official site supplied to do so, and simple aliasing or prepending things to the PATH hasn’t worked for me so far. Mac OS X has installed python by default, but the version is 2.7.10.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |