pyenv is a great tool. We have ported it to Windows. We need your thoughts to improve this library and your feedback helps to grow.
For existing python users, we support installation via pip: follow instructions
Contributors and Interested people can join us @Slack We need your help on motivating us, they help us a lot.
- Introduction
- pyenv
- pyenv-win commands
- Installation
- Usage
- How to get updates
- FAQ
- How to contribute
- Bug Tracker and Support
- License and Copyright
- Author and Thanks
Important Announcements
To keep in sync to pyenv linux/mac we changed the default version to 64bit Architecture as a main track. To support older version of pyenv-win i.e. 32bit Architecture as a seperate track.
Both the tracks supports installation of 64bit and 32bit python versions, the change in these tracks are python naming as shown below.
64bit-train or master i.e. 2.64.x
> pyenv install -l
....
3.8.0-win32
3.8.0
3.8.1rc1-win32
3.8.1rc1
3.8.1-win32
3.8.1
3.8.2-win32
3.8.2
....
32bit-train i.e. 2.32.x
>pyenv install -l
....
3.8.0
3.8.0-amd64
3.8.1rc1
3.8.1rc1-amd64
3.8.1
3.8.1-amd64
3.8.2
3.8.2-amd64
....
pyenv for python is a great tool but, like rbenv for ruby developers, it doesn't support Windows directly. After a bit of research and feedback from python developers, I discovered they wanted a similiar feature for Windows systems.
I got inspired from the pyenv issue for Windows support. Personally, I use Mac and Linux with beautiful pyenv, but some companies still use Windows for development. This library is to help Windows users manage multiple python versions.
I found a similar system for rbenv-win for ruby developers. This project was forked from rbenv-win and modified for pyenv. pyenv-win is getting mature every day thanks for the contributors and supports.
pyenv is a simple python version management tool. It lets you easily switch between multiple versions of Python. It's simple, unobtrusive, and follows the UNIX tradition of single-purpose tools that do one thing well.
commands List all available pyenv commands
local Set or show the local application-specific Python version
global Set or show the global Python version
shell Set or show the shell-specific Python version
install Install 1 or more versions of Python
uninstall Uninstall 1 or more versions of Python
update Update the cached version DB
rehash Rehash pyenv shims (run this after switching Python versions)
vname Show the current Python version
version Show the current Python version and its origin
versions List all Python versions available to pyenv
exec Runs an executable by first preparing PATH so that the selected Python
which Display the full path to an executable
whence List all Python versions that contain the given executable
Get pyenv-win via one of the following methods:
- With pip (to support existing python users)
- Powershell or Git Bash:
pip install pyenv-win --target $HOME\.pyenv
- cmd.exe:
pip install pyenv-win --target %USERPROFILE%\.pyenv
- Powershell or Git Bash:
- With zip file
- Download link: pyenv-win
- Create a
.pyenv
directory if not exist under$HOME
or%USERPROFILE%
- Extract and move files to
- Powershell or Git Bash:
$HOME/.pyenv/
- cmd.exe:
%USERPROFILE%\.pyenv\
- Ensure you see
bin
folder under%USERPROFILE%\.pyenv\pyenv-win
- With Git
- Powershell or Git Bash:
git clone https://github.com/pyenv-win/pyenv-win.git $HOME/.pyenv
- cmd.exe:
git clone https://github.com/pyenv-win/pyenv-win.git %USERPROFILE%\.pyenv
- Powershell or Git Bash:
- With Chocolatey
choco install pyenv-win
(this also installs all the environment variables)
NOTE: If you are running Windows 10 1905 or newer, you made need to disable the built-in Python launcher via Start > "Manage App Execution Aliases" and disabling the "App Installer" aliases for Python
If you installed using Chocolatey, you can skip to step 3.
-
Add PYENV to your Environment Variables
- Using either PowerShell or Windows Terminal run
[System.Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable('PYENV',$env:USERPROFILE + "\.pyenv\pyenv-win\","User")
-
Now add the following paths to your USER PATH variable in order to access the pyenv command. Run the following in PowerShell or Windows Terminal:
[System.Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable('path', $HOME + "\.pyenv\pyenv-win\bin;" + $HOME + "\.pyenv\pyenv-win\shims;" + $env:Path,"User")
-
Close and reopen your terminal app and run
pyenv --version
- If the return value is the installed version of
pyenv
, then contonue to Step 4 - If you receive a command not found error, ensure the environment variables are properly set via the GUI: This PC → Properties → Advanced system settings → Advanced → Environment Variables... → PATH
- If you receive a command not found error and you are using Visual Studio Code or another IDE with a built in terminal, restart it and try again
- If the return value is the installed version of
-
Now run the
pyenv rehash
from home directory- If you are getting an error, go through the steps again. Still facing the issue? Open a ticket.
-
Run
pyenv
to see list of commands it supports. More info...
Installation is done. Hurray!
-
With Git
- change directory to
%USERPROFILE%\.pyenv
viacd
- run following command
git checkout -b 32bit-train origin/32bit-train
- now run
pyenv --version
you need to see 2.32.x
- change directory to
-
With pip
- Powershell or Git Bash:
pip install pyenv-win==2.32.x --target $HOME\.pyenv
- cmd.exe:
pip install pyenv-win==2.32.x --target %USERPROFILE%\.pyenv
- Powershell or Git Bash:
-
With zip file
- Download link: pyenv-win
- Create a
.pyenv
directory if not exist under$HOME
or%USERPROFILE%
- Extract and move files to
- Powershell or Git Bash:
$HOME/.pyenv/
- cmd.exe:
%USERPROFILE%\.pyenv\
- Ensure you see
bin
folder under%USERPROFILE%\.pyenv\pyenv-win
Now follow finish the installation which are above
- Update the list of discoverable Python versions:
pyenv update
- To view a list of python versions supported by pyenv windows:
pyenv install -l
- To install a python version:
pyenv install 3.5.2
- Note: An install wizard may pop up for some non-silent installs. You'll need to click through the wizard during installation. There's no need to change any options in it. or you can use -q for quite installation
- You can also install multiple versions in one command too:
pyenv install 2.4.3 3.6.8
- To set a python version as the global version:
pyenv global 3.5.2
- This is the version of python that will be used by default if a local version (see below) isn't set.
- Note: The version must first be installed.
- To set a python version as the local version:
pyenv local 3.5.2
.- The version given will be used whenever
python
is called from within this folder. This is different than a virtual env, which needs to be explicitly activated. - Note: The version must first be installed.
- The version given will be used whenever
- After (un)installing any libraries using pip or modifying the files in a version's folder, you must run
pyenv rehash
to update pyenv with new shims for the python and libraries' executables.- Note: This must be run outside of the
.pyenv
folder.
- Note: This must be run outside of the
- To uninstall a python version:
pyenv uninstall 3.5.2
- To view which python you are using and its path:
pyenv version
- To view all the python versions installed on this system:
pyenv versions
- If installed via pip
- Add pyenv-win installed path to
easy_install.pth
file which is located in site-package. Now pyenv-win is recognised by pip - Get updates via pip
pip install --upgrade pyenv-win
- Add pyenv-win installed path to
- If installed via Git
- Go to the
%USERPROFILE%\.pyenv\pyenv-win
(which is your installed path) and rungit pull
- Go to the
- If installed via zip
- Download the latest zip and extract it
- Go to
%USERPROFILE%\.pyenv\pyenv-win
and replace the folderslibexec
andbin
with the new ones you just downloaded
-
Question: Does pyenv for windows support python2?
- Answer: Yes, We support python2 from version 2.4+ until python.org officially removes it.
- Versions below 2.4 use outdated Wise installers and have issues installing multiple patch versions, unlike Windows MSI and the new Python3 installers that support "extraction" installations.
-
Question: Does pyenv for windows support python3?
- Answer: Yes, we support python3 from version 3.0. We support it from 3.0 until python.org officially removes it.
-
Question: I am getting the issue
batch file cannot be found.
while installing python, what should I do?- Answer: You can ignore it. It's calling
pyenv rehash
command before creating the bat file in few devices.
- Answer: You can ignore it. It's calling
-
Question: System is stuck while uninstalling the python version, what to do?
- Answer: Navigate to the location you installed pyenv, opening its 'versions' folder (usually
%USERPROFILE%\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions
), and delete the folder of the version you want removed.
- Answer: Navigate to the location you installed pyenv, opening its 'versions' folder (usually
-
Question: I installed pyenv-win using pip. How can I uninstall it?
- Answer: Follow the pip instructions in How to get updates and then run
pip uninstall pyenv-win
- Answer: Follow the pip instructions in How to get updates and then run
-
Question: pyenv-win not recognised, but I have set the ENV PATH?
- Answer: According to Windows when adding the path under the User or System variables, for the User variable you need to logout and login again to reflect the changes. For System variable it's not required.
- Version naming conventions have now changed from using 64-bit suffixes when specifying a version to (un)install. Now all you need to use is the version number to install your platform's specifc bit version.
- *WARNING*: This change is backwards incompatible with v1.2.5 or less so please install 32bit-train which is backward compatible or uninstall all versions of python prior to upgrading pyenv to this version.
- Ex.
pyenv install 2.7.17
will install as 64-bit on x64 and 32-bit on x86. (64-bit can still use2.7.17-win32
to install the 32-bit version) pyenv global/local/shell
also now recognize your platform and select the appropirate bit version. (64-bit users will need to specify[version]-win32
to use the 32-bit versions now)
- Added support for true unobtrusive, local installs.
- *WARNING*: This change is backwards incompatible with v1.2.5 or less so please install 32bit-train which is backward compatible or uninstall all versions of python prior to upgrading pyenv to this version.
- No install/uninstall records are written to the registry or Start Menu anymore (no "Programs and Features" records).
- When installing a patch version of python (ex. 3.6.1) installing another patch version (ex. 3.6.2) won't reuse the same folder and overwrite the previously installed minor version. They're now kept separate.
- Uninstalls are now a simple folder deletion. (Can be done manually by the user safely now or
pyenv uninstall
)
- Added support for (un)installing multiple versions of python in a single command or all DB versions via the
-a/--all
switch.- When using
--all
on x64 computers you can use--32only
or--64only
to install only 32-bit or only 64-bit version s of python. (Does nothing on 32-bit computers, and better filters may be in the works later on)
- When using
pyenv global/rehash
is called automatically after (un)installing a new Python version. (last version specified, if installing multiple)- Pyenv now uses a cached DB of versions scraped straight from the Python mirror site and can be updated manually by a user using
pyenv update
. Users no longer have to wait for pyenv's source repo to be updated to use a new version of Python when it releases, and can also use the new alpha/beta python releases. pyenv install
now has a-c/--clear
to empty cached installers in the%PYENV%\install_cache
folder.pyenv rehash
now acknowledges %PATHEXT% (plus PY and PYW) when creating shims instead of just for exe, bat, cmd and py files so more executables are available from\Scripts
and libraries installed using pip.- Shims created using
pyenv rehash
no longer callpyenv exec
, but instead call python directly to prevent issues with other programs executing the shims. - Shims now use cp1250 as the default code page since Python2 will never actually support cp65001. cp1250 has better support for upper ANSI characters (ex. "Pokémon"), but still isn't full UTF-8 compatible.
- Note: Support for Python versions below 2.4 have been dropped since their installers don't install "cleanly" like versions from 2.4 onward and they're predominently out of use/support in most envrionments now.
- Fork the project & clone locally.
- Create an upstream remote and sync your local copy before you branch.
- Branch for each separate piece of work. It's a good practise to write test cases.
- Do the work, write good commit messages, and read the CONTRIBUTING file if there is one.
- Test the changes by running
tests\test_install.bat
andtests\test_uninstall.bat
- Push to your origin repository.
- Create a new Pull Request in GitHub.
- Please report any suggestions, bug reports, or annoyances with pyenv-win through the GitHub bug tracker.
-
pyenv-win is licensed under MIT 2019
pyenv-win was developed by Kiran Kumar Kotari and Contributors
Thanks for all Contributors and Supports for patience for the latest major release.