Thanks Vince.  Here's what those commands proruce:

Thomas-Rogerss-Mac-mini:~ chop$ pip list --format=columns

Package    Version 
---------- ------- 
Cheetah    2.4.4   
configobj  5.0.6   
Markdown   2.6.8   
olefile    0.44    
Pillow     4.0.0   
pip        9.0.1   
pyephem    3.7.6.0 
pyserial   3.2.1   
pysqlite   2.8.3   
pyusb      1.0.0   
setuptools 32.1.0  
six        1.10.0  
weewx      3.6.2   
wheel      0.29.0  

Thomas-Rogerss-Mac-mini:~ chop$ /usr/local/bin/python --version 
Python 2.7.13 

Thomas-Rogerss-Mac-mini:~ chop$ echo "MAc version OS X El Capitan 10.11.6" 
MAc version OS X El Capitan 10.11.6 

Thomas-Rogerss-Mac-mini:~ chop$ brew list 
gdbm libusb openssl readline 
git libusb-compat python sqlite



On Friday, February 17, 2017 at 3:04:58 PM UTC-7, Vince Skahan wrote:
>
> On Friday, February 17, 2017 at 11:48:55 AM UTC-8, mwall wrote:
>>
>> On Friday, February 17, 2017 at 2:22:44 PM UTC-5, Thom Rogers wrote:
>>>
>>> Not sure what this tells us, but here's the output of those commands:
>>>
>>
>> trying to figure out whether you have multiple python installations
>>
>>
>>
> Took a quick look on my Mac and came up with a couple ideas too...
>
>    - you might also try  "pip list --format=columns" to see what modules 
>    are there
>    - is there a  '/usr/bin/python' present ?  If so try 
> "/usr/local/bin/python 
>    --version" there too.
>    - and 'about this mac' would tell us what version of MacOS they're 
>    running
>    - and try "brew list" to show what stuff was added that way
>
> My ElCapitan system has /usr/bin/python only, but /usr/local/bin/pip is 
> present, but I have lost recollection of how I installed pip on the Mac 
> unfortunately.
>
> Packaging is painful.  At least it's not a npm package or ruby gem or 
> ....... (sigh....)
>
>
>
>  
>

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