On 3/20/14 2:53 PM, Alan Meyer wrote:
#!/usr/bin/env python

Only use the "python2" or "python3" versions if you really have a reason
to do so.

It gets tricky for distribution (you need docs for your distros, imho) because #!/usr/bin/env python means different things on different systems.

I actually have three major versions of python2 and 2 major versions of python3 on my primary system at this point. On my machine python2.6 is "python". That is because that system shipped with 2.6 and many of the subsystem stuff depends on python2.6 /

When I call python2 that means python2.7.6 /

When I call python3 that means python3.3.4 /

I can also call python2.7, which is 2.7.2 /

You get the idea. There is no one set rule, because there are many distros (gnu/linux) that use python at various versions, and they all us different setups. Really , you need an install script to snoop out the configurables.

marcus
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