开源 企业版 高校版 私有云 模力方舟 AI 队友
代码拉取完成,页面将自动刷新
捐赠
捐赠前请先登录
扫描微信二维码支付
取消
支付完成
支付提示
将跳转至支付宝完成支付
确定
取消
1 Star 0 Fork 0

source-code-analysis/python3.8.1

加入 Gitee
与超过 1400万 开发者一起发现、参与优秀开源项目,私有仓库也完全免费 :)
免费加入
已有帐号? 立即登录
文件
master
分支 (1)
master
master
分支 (1)
master
克隆/下载
克隆/下载
提示
下载代码请复制以下命令到终端执行
为确保你提交的代码身份被 Gitee 正确识别,请执行以下命令完成配置
初次使用 SSH 协议进行代码克隆、推送等操作时,需按下述提示完成 SSH 配置
1 生成 RSA 密钥
2 获取 RSA 公钥内容,并配置到 SSH公钥
在 Gitee 上使用 SVN,请访问 使用指南
使用 HTTPS 协议时,命令行会出现如下账号密码验证步骤。基于安全考虑,Gitee 建议 配置并使用私人令牌 替代登录密码进行克隆、推送等操作
Username for 'https://gitee.com': userName
Password for 'https://userName@gitee.com': # 私人令牌
master
分支 (1)
master
venv.rst 7.50 KB
一键复制 编辑 原始数据 按行查看 历史
zhangweibo 提交于 2021年11月16日 09:46 +08:00 . git init

Virtual Environments and Packages

Introduction

Python applications will often use packages and modules that don't come as part of the standard library. Applications will sometimes need a specific version of a library, because the application may require that a particular bug has been fixed or the application may be written using an obsolete version of the library's interface.

This means it may not be possible for one Python installation to meet the requirements of every application. If application A needs version 1.0 of a particular module but application B needs version 2.0, then the requirements are in conflict and installing either version 1.0 or 2.0 will leave one application unable to run.

The solution for this problem is to create a :term:`virtual environment`, a self-contained directory tree that contains a Python installation for a particular version of Python, plus a number of additional packages.

Different applications can then use different virtual environments. To resolve the earlier example of conflicting requirements, application A can have its own virtual environment with version 1.0 installed while application B has another virtual environment with version 2.0. If application B requires a library be upgraded to version 3.0, this will not affect application A's environment.

Creating Virtual Environments

The module used to create and manage virtual environments is called :mod:`venv`. :mod:`venv` will usually install the most recent version of Python that you have available. If you have multiple versions of Python on your system, you can select a specific Python version by running python3 or whichever version you want.

To create a virtual environment, decide upon a directory where you want to place it, and run the :mod:`venv` module as a script with the directory path:

python3 -m venv tutorial-env

This will create the tutorial-env directory if it doesn't exist, and also create directories inside it containing a copy of the Python interpreter, the standard library, and various supporting files.

A common directory location for a virtual environment is .venv. This name keeps the directory typically hidden in your shell and thus out of the way while giving it a name that explains why the directory exists. It also prevents clashing with .env environment variable definition files that some tooling supports.

Once you've created a virtual environment, you may activate it.

On Windows, run:

tutorial-env\Scripts\activate.bat

On Unix or MacOS, run:

source tutorial-env/bin/activate

(This script is written for the bash shell. If you use the :program:`csh` or :program:`fish` shells, there are alternate activate.csh and activate.fish scripts you should use instead.)

Activating the virtual environment will change your shell's prompt to show what virtual environment you're using, and modify the environment so that running python will get you that particular version and installation of Python. For example:

$ source ~/envs/tutorial-env/bin/activate
(tutorial-env) $ python
Python 3.5.1 (default, May 6 2016, 10:59:36)
 ...
>>> import sys
>>> sys.path
['', '/usr/local/lib/python35.zip', ...,
'~/envs/tutorial-env/lib/python3.5/site-packages']
>>>

Managing Packages with pip

You can install, upgrade, and remove packages using a program called :program:`pip`. By default pip will install packages from the Python Package Index, < (tutorial-env) $ pip search astronomy skyfield - Elegant astronomy for Python gary - Galactic astronomy and gravitational dynamics. novas - The United States Naval Observatory NOVAS astronomy library astroobs - Provides astronomy ephemeris to plan telescope observations PyAstronomy - A collection of astronomy related tools for Python. ...

pip has a number of subcommands: "search", "install", "uninstall", "freeze", etc. (Consult the :ref:`installing-index` guide for complete documentation for pip.)

You can install the latest version of a package by specifying a package's name:

(tutorial-env) $ pip install novas
Collecting novas
 Downloading novas-3.1.1.3.tar.gz (136kB)
Installing collected packages: novas
 Running setup.py install for novas
Successfully installed novas-3.1.1.3

You can also install a specific version of a package by giving the package name followed by == and the version number:

(tutorial-env) $ pip install requests==2.6.0
Collecting requests==2.6.0
 Using cached requests-2.6.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Installing collected packages: requests
Successfully installed requests-2.6.0

If you re-run this command, pip will notice that the requested version is already installed and do nothing. You can supply a different version number to get that version, or you can run pip install --upgrade to upgrade the package to the latest version:

(tutorial-env) $ pip install --upgrade requests
Collecting requests
Installing collected packages: requests
 Found existing installation: requests 2.6.0
 Uninstalling requests-2.6.0:
 Successfully uninstalled requests-2.6.0
Successfully installed requests-2.7.0

pip uninstall followed by one or more package names will remove the packages from the virtual environment.

pip show will display information about a particular package:

(tutorial-env) $ pip show requests
---
Metadata-Version: 2.0
Name: requests
Version: 2.7.0
Summary: Python HTTP for Humans.
Home-page: http://python-requests.org
Author: Kenneth Reitz
Author-email: me@kennethreitz.com
License: Apache 2.0
Location: /Users/akuchling/envs/tutorial-env/lib/python3.4/site-packages
Requires:

pip list will display all of the packages installed in the virtual environment:

(tutorial-env) $ pip list
novas (3.1.1.3)
numpy (1.9.2)
pip (7.0.3)
requests (2.7.0)
setuptools (16.0)

pip freeze will produce a similar list of the installed packages, but the output uses the format that pip install expects. A common convention is to put this list in a requirements.txt file:

(tutorial-env) $ pip freeze > requirements.txt
(tutorial-env) $ cat requirements.txt
novas==3.1.1.3
numpy==1.9.2
requests==2.7.0

The requirements.txt can then be committed to version control and shipped as part of an application. Users can then install all the necessary packages with install -r:

(tutorial-env) $ pip install -r requirements.txt
Collecting novas==3.1.1.3 (from -r requirements.txt (line 1))
 ...
Collecting numpy==1.9.2 (from -r requirements.txt (line 2))
 ...
Collecting requests==2.7.0 (from -r requirements.txt (line 3))
 ...
Installing collected packages: novas, numpy, requests
 Running setup.py install for novas
Successfully installed novas-3.1.1.3 numpy-1.9.2 requests-2.7.0

pip has many more options. Consult the :ref:`installing-index` guide for complete documentation for pip. When you've written a package and want to make it available on the Python Package Index, consult the :ref:`distributing-index` guide.

Loading...
举报
举报成功
我们将于2个工作日内通过站内信反馈结果给你!
请认真填写举报原因,尽可能描述详细。
请选择举报类型
取消
发送
误判申诉

此处可能存在不合适展示的内容,页面不予展示。您可通过相关编辑功能自查并修改。

如您确认内容无涉及 不当用语 / 纯广告导流 / 暴力 / 低俗色情 / 侵权 / 盗版 / 虚假 / 无价值内容或违法国家有关法律法规的内容,可点击提交进行申诉,我们将尽快为您处理。

取消
提交

简介

暂无描述
取消

发行版

暂无发行版

贡献者

全部

近期动态

不能加载更多了
编辑仓库简介
简介内容
主页
马建仓 AI 助手
尝试更多
代码解读
代码找茬
代码优化
1
https://gitee.com/python_sourcecode/python3.8.1.git
git@gitee.com:python_sourcecode/python3.8.1.git
python_sourcecode
python3.8.1
python3.8.1
master
点此查找更多帮助

搜索帮助

评论
仓库举报
回到顶部
登录提示
该操作需登录 Gitee 帐号,请先登录后再操作。
立即登录
没有帐号,去注册

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /