I have a directory which hosts all of my Django apps (C:\My_Projects). I want to add this directory to my PYTHONPATH so I can call the apps directly.
I tried adding C:\My_Projects\; to my Windows Path variable from the Windows GUI (My Computer > Properties > Advanced System Settings > Environment Variables). But it still doesn’t read the coltrane module and generates this error:
Error: No module named coltrane
回答 0
您知道在Windows上对我非常有效的方法。
My Computer > Properties > Advanced System Settings > Environment Variables >
You know what has worked for me really well on windows.
My Computer > Properties > Advanced System Settings > Environment Variables >
Just add the path as C:\Python27 (or wherever you installed python)
OR
Then under system variables I create a new Variable called PythonPath. In this variable I have C:\Python27\Lib;C:\Python27\DLLs;C:\Python27\Lib\lib-tk;C:\other-folders-on-the-path
This is the best way that has worked for me which I hadn’t found in any of the docs offered.
EDIT: For those who are not able to get it,
Please add
C:\Python27;
along with it. Else it will never work.
回答 1
Windows 7 Professional I修改了@mongoose_za的答案,以便更轻松地更改python版本:
As a final sanity check open a command prompt and enter python. You should see
>python [whatever version you are using]
If you need to switch between versions, you only need to modify the PY_HOME variable to point to the proper directory. This is bit easier to manage if you need multiple python versions installed.
To set the PYTHONPATH permanently, add the line to your autoexec.bat. Alternatively, if you edit the system variable through the System Properties, it will also be changed permanently.
Just append your installation path (ex. C:\Python27\) to the PATH variable in System variables. Then close and open your command line and type ‘python’.
The easier way to set the path in python is :
click start> My Computer >Properties > Advanced System Settings > Environment Variables >
second windows >
select Path > Edit > and then add “;C:\Python27\;C:\Python27\Scripts\”
You can also add a .pth file containing the desired directory in either your c:\PythonX.X folder, or your \site-packages folder, which tends to be my preferred method when I’m developing a Python package.
This won’t persist over reboots or get translated to other files. It is however great if you don’t want to make a permanent modification to your system.
The easiest way to do that successfully, is to run the python installer again (after the first installation) and then:
choose Modify.
check the optional features which you want and click Next.
here we go, in “Advanced Options” step you must see an option saying “Add Python to environment variables”. Just check that option and click Install.
When the installation is completed, python environment variables are added and you can easily use python everywhere.
In Python 3.4 on windows it worked when I added it to PATH enviroment variable instead of PYTHONPATH. Like if you have installed Python 3.4 in D:\Programming\Python34 then add this at the end of your PATH environment variable
;D:\Programming\Python34
Close and reopen command prompt and execute ‘python’. It will open the python shell. This also fixed my Sublime 3 issue of ‘python is not recognized as an internal or external command’.
The python 2.X paths can be set from few of the above instructions.
Python 3 by default will be installed in
C:\Users\\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python35-32\
So this path has to be added to Path variable in windows environment.
To augment PYTHONPATH, run regedit and navigate to KEY_LOCAL_MACHINE
\SOFTWARE\Python\PythonCore and then select the folder for the python
version you wish to use. Inside this is a folder labelled PythonPath,
with one entry that specifies the paths where the default install
stores modules. Right-click on PythonPath and choose to create a new
key. You may want to name the key after the project whose module
locations it will specify; this way, you can easily compartmentalize
and track your path modifications.
The PYTHONPATH environment variable is used by Python to specify a list of directories that modules can be imported from on Windows. When running, you can inspect the sys.path variable to see which directories will be searched when you import something.
To set this variable from the Command Prompt, use: set PYTHONPATH=list;of;paths.
To set this variable from PowerShell, use: $env:PYTHONPATH=’list;of;paths’ just before you launch Python.
Setting this variable globally through the Environment Variables settings is not recommended, as it may be used by any version of Python instead of the one that you intend to use. Read more in the Python on Windows FAQ docs.
For anyone trying to achieve this with Python 3.3+, the Windows installer now includes an option to add python.exe to the system search path. Read more in the docs.
Just use the standard package site, which was made for this job!
and here is how (plagiating my own answer to my own question on the very same topic):
Open a Python prompt and type
>>> import site
>>> site.USER_SITE
'C:\\Users\\ojdo\\AppData\\Roaming\\Python\\Python37\\site-packages'
...
Create this folder if it does not exist yet:
...
>>> import os
>>> os.makedirs(site.USER_SITE)
...
Create a file sitecustomize.py in this folder containing the content of FIND_MY_PACKAGES, either manually or using something like the following code. Of course, you have to change C:\My_Projects to the correct path to your custom import location.
...
>>> FIND_MY_PACKAGES = """
import site
site.addsitedir(r'C:\My_Projects')
"""
>>> filename = os.path.join(site.USER_SITE, 'sitecustomize.py')
>>> with open(filename, 'w') as outfile:
... print(FIND_MY_PACKAGES, file=outfile)
And the next time you start Python, C:\My_Projects is present in your sys.path, without having to touch system-wide settings. Bonus: the above steps work on Linux, too!
I got it worked in Windows 10 by following below steps.
Under environment variables, you should only add it under PATH of “System Variables” and not under “User Variables“. This is a great confusion and eats time if we miss it.
Also, just try to navigate to the path where you got Python installed in your machine and add it to PATH. This just works and no need to add any other thing in my case.I added just below path and it worked.
Most important, close command prompt, re-open and then re-try typing “python” to see the version details. You need to restart command prompt to see the version after setting up the path in environment variables.
After restarting, you should be able to see the python prompt and below info when typing python in command prompt:
While this question is about the ‘real’ Python, it did come up in a websearch for ‘Iron Python PYTHONPATH’. For Iron Python users as confused as I was: It turns out that Iron Python looks for an environment variable called IRONPYTHONPATH.
Linux/Mac/POSIX users: Don’t forget that not only does Windows use \ as path separators, but it also uses ; as path delimiters, not :.