Thank you MRAB. As somebody mentioned before, the easiest solution is you can do pip install before typing python. That would work.
On Sun, Oct 24, 2021 at 12:00 AM MRAB <pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com> wrote: > On 2021-10-23 14:53, tommy yama wrote: > > It seems you use windows to install. > > > > > > Then, you need conda. Pip works for Linux. > > > On Windows, 'conda' is for the Anaconda version of Python. If you're > using the standard version of Python from python.org you use pip or, > preferably, py -m pip. > > > Check this out. > > https://numpy.org/install/ > > > > > > On Thu, Oct 21, 2021, 11:35 PM Grant Edwards <grant.b.edwa...@gmail.com> > > wrote: > > > >> On 2021-10-21, Mats Wichmann <m...@wichmann.us> wrote: > >> > >> > There are some nuances. If you are on a Linux system, Python is a > >> > system program and you don't want to try to install into system > >> > locations (you'll run into permission problems anyway), so trying a > user > >> > install is useful. So: > >> > > >> > pip install --user numpy > >> > > >> > In fact, if you're on a Linux system you *may* prefer to install the > >> > packaged versions - use the appropriate package manager commands. > >> > >> Not all systems have a 'pip' executable. If a 'pip' exectuable does > >> exist, it might not be the same version as your defualt python > >> executable. It's usually a better idea to do it this way: > >> > >> $ python -m pip install --user numpy > >> > >> That said, if you're on Linux system, you're almostg always better off > >> using your distro's package manger to install numpy. > >> > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list