Hi i wrote about a week ago about the problems i had with importing
sqlite3 on python 3.3 on ubuntu 12.04. Due to this ive tried to revert
back to python 3.2 which is the default installation along wit 2.7.
I've run into 2 problems.
1) I'm new to ubuntu and someone helped me install python3.3
consider this:
sudo apt-get search python3
to find out the exact name or how python 3.3 is registered
sudo apt-get uninstall [that-exact-name]
sudo apt-get reinstall python32
sudo apt-get reinstall python-virtualenv
Wolf Halton
--
This Apt Has Super Cow Powers - http://sourcefreedom.com
Hello Matthew,
You likely want to investigate the Linux Alternatives system which
handles default pointers to a given version of a program. People usually
encounter this system for the first time while dealing with different
versions of Java JRE needing to be installed at the same time.
I'm a
On Mon, Jan 6, 2014 at 11:38 AM, Matthew Ngaha chigga...@gmail.com wrote:
2) I really need to use virtualenv for python3.2. The problem is
python3.3 seems to be the default and overrides every virtualenv thing
i try doing. whether it is pyvenv or virtualenv, the 3.3 version takes
priority. It
On Tue, Jan 7, 2014 at 12:40 AM, eryksun eryk...@gmail.com wrote:
virtualenv allows you to specify the target Python:
virtualenv --python=/usr/bin/python3.3 myenv
Refer to `man virtualenv` for more options.
Or use synaptic if you prefer a GUI interface.
Ubuntu has a Python 3.3
I tried eryksun's suggestion on installing python3.3:
Ubuntu has a Python 3.3 package. Installation should be simple:
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install python3.3
on my Ubuntu 12.04 system and got the following message:
E: Unable to locate package python3.3
E: Couldn't find any
On Mon, Jan 6, 2014 at 10:31 PM, mes...@juno.com mes...@juno.com wrote:
I tried eryksun's suggestion on installing python3.3:
Ubuntu has a Python 3.3 package. Installation should be simple:
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install python3.3
on my Ubuntu 12.04 system and got the