Be sure, just double check you're inside the virtual environment.
You should see something like
(your_env)c/path/to/your/project:
On Jun 12, 2017 8:50 AM, "Antonis Christofides" <
anto...@djangodeployment.com> wrote:
> If you have created the virtualenv with --system-site-packages, you need
> t
If you have created the virtualenv with --system-site-packages, you need to tell
it "pip install --upgrade django".
See also https://djangodeployment.com/2016/11/01/virtualenv-demystified/.
Regards,
Antonis
Antonis Christofides
http://djangodeployment.com
On 2017-06-12 16:41, yingi keme wrote:
Okk.
But then when i create a new virtual environment, and i try to install a
seperate django. It says the django package already exist. Is it that i have to
install another version of django?
Yingi Kem
> On 12 Jun 2017, at 2:22 PM, Russell Keith-Magee
> wrote:
>
> Hi Yingi,
>
> Once you c
Hi Yingi,
Once you create a virtual environment, it is an isolated sandbox. It doesn’t
have access to the world outside that sandbox. That includes Django - your
virtual environment will need to have Django installed separately, even if your
“main” Python 3.5 install already has Django installe
Hello
I have this issue i am trying to resolve. I installed django directly into my
Python35 directory without creating a new virtual environment for my project.
However, now i want to create a new virtual environment for a new project. If
i make some modifications in django inside this new vi
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