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15:35
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Q: Non-functional pip after Homebrew upgrade of Python

oromeAfter performing my latest Homebrew update of Python, pip --version produces the error -bash: /usr/local/bin/pip: /usr/local/opt/python/bin/python3.7: bad interpreter: No such file or directory I've tried uninstalling all of my Homebrew Pythons and reinstalling just python, but still get the sam...

Did you have conda (or anaconda) installed any time in the past?
@RahulBharadwaj Nope. I had additional Pythons, but ran brew uninstall on all of them. It sure looks like one of those is still connected to pip.
Where is python3.7 located? Can you do which python3.7 and tell the path?
@RahulBharadwaj There's no 3.7. I had (in addition to Apple's 2.7) Homebrew's (3.7) and 3.8. It looks like the latest Hombrew update was to 3.8, so the separate 3.8 became unnecessary. In any case, that's when trouble started. So I cleaned up by uninstalling all my Pythons and reinstalling just Python brew install python. Somehow pip still looks for 3.7, it seems.
@RahulBharadwaj If I ` export PATH=/usr/local/opt/python/libexec/bin:$PATH` I can get pip working (20.0.2 for 3.8), but not pip3 (same error).
Ok we can fix that. Can I know the path of a working python binary? We can just force that path in the pip file
Have a look at this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/49240445/6400614
You can put the working path on top of the file in the shebang
stackoverflow services are currently down in my region
16:03
Homebrew's 3.X is in /usr/local/opt/python/libexec/bin/python
ok, so can you try putting that path in the shebang part of /usr/local/bin/pip and /usr/local/bin/pip3
Also at (aliased?): /usr/local/bin/python3
no need there for now
Do I need to do that now that I have it on PATH? With it there things seem to work.
yep, add it to path
16:06
Oh wow: why does pip have 3.7 hardcoded? That's fragile.
no idea
from years of python development I learnt 2 things
1. never use conda if you want to use pip and don't want your python installation to be messed up
2. in linux distributions, never mess with python (i.e. uninstalling, reinstalling, messing with pip etc)
So I could just put /usr/local/bin/python3 after the shebang, right? And make sure that's also on PATH for good measure?
yes do both
also, in case its useful, never use pip3 and pip. Use them as "python -m pip" and "python3 -m pip"
did it work?
16:26
Sort of. It worked, then pip said pip was out of date and updating it but garbage after the shebangs again, then I edited the pips again as above and now only pip3 works.
And python -m pip3 gives /usr/local/opt/[email protected]/bin/python3.8: No module named pip3
no no
pip is the module name
python -m pip for python 2.7
python3 -m pip for python 3
Wow this is nuts
I can get pip3 working now.
But for pip I get
`Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pkg_resources/__init__.py", line 583, in _build_master
ws.require(__requires__)
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pkg_resources/__init__.py", line 900, in require
needed = self.resolve(parse_requirements(requirements))
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pkg_resources/__init__.py", line 791, in resolve
raise VersionConflict(dist, req).with_context(dependent_req)
pkg_resources.VersionConflict: (pip 20.1.1 (/usr/local/lib/python3.8/site-packages), Requirement.parse('pip==20.0.2'))
do pip upgrade from python -m pip
and fix the paths again
16:36
Requirement already up-to-date: pip in /usr/local/lib/python3.8/site-packages (20.1.1)
Do I have to edit the shebangs in the pips every time I update pip?!
Manually?
yep, as far as I know, that's the only way
that's why I refrain from updating pip
its decades old and they haven't figured out a good way to fix it.
Anyway, if its working then I'm off
16:52
I think I'll switch to Haskell!

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