Jul 8, 2020 16:52
I think I'll switch to Haskell!
Jul 8, 2020 16:36
Manually?
Jul 8, 2020 16:36
Do I have to edit the shebangs in the pips every time I update pip?!
Jul 8, 2020 16:36
Requirement already up-to-date: pip in /usr/local/lib/python3.8/site-packages (20.1.1)
Jul 8, 2020 16:33
`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'))
Jul 8, 2020 16:33
But for pip I get
Jul 8, 2020 16:33
I can get pip3 working now.
Jul 8, 2020 16:33
Wow this is nuts
Jul 8, 2020 16:26
And python -m pip3 gives /usr/local/opt/[email protected]/bin/python3.8: No module named pip3
Jul 8, 2020 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 It worked, then pip said pip was out of date and updating it but garbage after the shebangs again, then I edited the pips again as above and now only pip3 works.
Jul 8, 2020 16:08
So I could just put /usr/local/bin/python3 after the shebang, right? And make sure that's also on PATH for good measure?
Jul 8, 2020 16:06
Oh wow: why does pip have 3.7 hardcoded? That's fragile.
Jul 8, 2020 16:06
Do I need to do that now that I have it on PATH? With it there things seem to work.
Jul 8, 2020 16:04
Also at (aliased?): /usr/local/bin/python3
Jul 8, 2020 16:03
Homebrew's 3.X is in /usr/local/opt/python/libexec/bin/python
Jul 8, 2020 15:35
@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.
Jul 8, 2020 15:35
@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).
Jul 8, 2020 15:35
@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.
 
Sep 27, 2015 17:53
K. Thanks. (Asked about netrc here.)
Sep 27, 2015 17:46
And one style/practices question: It sounds like having a few sandboxes around is useful and inevitable — where does one general keep such sandboxes, i.e., ones that are for tools (rather than temps for testing or dev)? Is there a standard place for them to be collected?
Sep 27, 2015 17:41
Excellent. OK, let me live with this for a bit and see if it stays stable. If it does this looks like an answer (though I have no idea why it's working!). Meanwhile I'll see about netrc from the author.
Sep 27, 2015 17:33
How do I "switch back" to my "real" Haskell packages installation (for purposes of import and build)? No that I've done cabal sandbox initCabal and GHC think I'm "in" that sandbox, right? How do I "get out of it" for all other purposes, but still leave it around for (the sole purpose of) invoking neil from the command line?
Sep 27, 2015 17:26
So I can just leave the sandbox around and invoke neil from it without it touching or changing (or needing to change) anything in my "real" Haskell packages? That would answer (2), and would be great.
Sep 27, 2015 17:23
So now the question is more about (a) sandbox management and (b) whether I can get neil to use netrc (so I don't have to keep entering my complicated password) — and maybe (c) whether I can just install neil along with my other packages, ignoring the warning that they will all "break".
Sep 27, 2015 17:21
It worked!
Sep 27, 2015 17:21
I guess I need to get comfortable with sandboxes (I've never used them). Briefly though (1) how do I tear down a sandbox and (2) if neil docs works, can I leave the sandbox around and not use it for anything else other than to invoke neil from the command line?
Sep 27, 2015 17:21
I was a bit spooked by the pages of packages that installing it threatens to break.
Sep 27, 2015 17:21
Since I get all the way to the upload step with the other scripts, I think the best avenue is to figure out what "file in tar archive is not in the expected directory". Is there perhaps something that Hackage needs to be uploaded, that would not have been built locally; a setting I should add to my (local) Cabal/Haddock config, perhaps?
Sep 27, 2015 17:21
This would build them locally with my version of base though, right?
 
Aug 19, 2015 11:47
(blush) It turns out that @Carsten was on the right track! Earlier on the notebook I had Either a b = Left a | Right b, which (remarkably!) Haskell let me do without warning. That's why there were no instances and why (right in front of us) it said it was defined in "<interactive>". Removing or not executing that statement fixes the issue.
Aug 18, 2015 20:12
*link
Aug 18, 2015 20:09
If you want you can like to these instructions noting that thought they say to merely put the dir "on" the path, they show putting it at the start (which is what the Haskell-Platform instructions say explicitly).
Aug 18, 2015 20:06
If you like, you can post an answer to the question: For IHaskell to work properly it is critical that ~/Library/Haskell/bin be on the path before ghc because ihaskell is there. I'll accept that.
Aug 18, 2015 20:04
I think I'll run with this for now.
Aug 18, 2015 20:03
Likely!
Aug 18, 2015 20:02
So, critically for this error: ihaskell (I'm guessing).
Aug 18, 2015 20:02
cpphs gridsynth happy hlint ihaskell superdoc-armor
Aug 18, 2015 20:01
I think I'll stick with this for now (since it works) and see how things evolve.
Aug 18, 2015 20:01
Not sure why that mattered for the Either behavior I was seeing in notebooks, but it did. Putting the path where they assume it is fixed it.
Aug 18, 2015 19:56
But I missed that before.
Aug 18, 2015 19:56
wiki.haskell.org/Mac_OS_X (2.1, "Important notes")
Aug 18, 2015 19:55
Only one cabal in /usr/bin/.
Aug 18, 2015 19:54
No idea, but the instructions say explicitly that it should be in front.
Aug 18, 2015 19:52
@user5402 Right.
Aug 18, 2015 19:52
And that was before /Users/Rax/Library/Haskell/bin in my path.
Aug 18, 2015 19:51
Yes.
Aug 18, 2015 19:49
So the key thing does seem to be that the path to Haskell's bin needs to be "before ghc in your path".
Aug 18, 2015 19:48
Sorry: /private/etc/paths (just to be clear). And if I put it at the front of the list there it also works.
Aug 18, 2015 19:45
Yes. I generally do the latter, but the former seems to be required (to force ordering).
Aug 18, 2015 19:43
The key thing I stumbled across was that the path to Haskell's bin needs to be "before ghc in your path". The instructions I was using just said "on your path".