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Friday, March 31, 2017

Python 3 - Environment Setup

Try it Option Online

We have set up the Python Programming environment online, so that you can compile and execute all the available examples online. It will give you the confidence in what you are reading and will enable you to verify the programs with different options. Feel free to modify any example and execute it online.

Try the following example using our online compiler available at CodingGround
#!/usr/bin/python3

print ("Hello, Python!")
For most of the examples given in this tutorial, you will find a Try it option on our website code sections, at the top right corner that will take you to the online compiler. Just use it and enjoy your learning.
Python 3 is available for Windows, Mac OS and most of the flavors of Linux operating system. Even though Python 2 is available for many other OSs, Python 3 support either has not been made available for them or has been dropped.

Local Environment Setup

Open a terminal window and type "python" to find out if it is already installed and which version is installed.

Getting Python

Windows platform

Binaries of latest version of Python 3 (Python 3.5.1) are available on this download page
The following different installation options are available.
  • Windows x86-64 embeddable zip file
  • Windows x86-64 executable installer
  • Windows x86-64 web-based installer
  • Windows x86 embeddable zip file
  • Windows x86 executable installer
  • Windows x86 web-based installer
Note − In order to install Python 3.5.1, minimum OS requirements are Windows 7 with SP1. For versions 3.0 to 3.4.x Windows XP is acceptable.

Linux platform

Different flavors of Linux use different package managers for installation of new packages.
On Ubuntu Linux, Python 3 is installed using the following command from the terminal.
$sudo apt-get install python3-minimal
Installation from source
Download Gzipped source tarball from Python's download URL − https://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.5.1/Python-3.5.1.tgz
Extract the tarball
tar xvfz Python-3.5.1.tgz
Configure and Install:
cd Python-3.5.1
./configure --prefix = /opt/python3.5.1
make  
sudo make install

Mac OS

Download Mac OS installers from this URL − https://www.python.org/downloads/mac-osx/
  • Mac OS X 64-bit/32-bit installer − python-3.5.1-macosx10.6.pkg
  • Mac OS X 32-bit i386/PPC installer − python-3.5.1-macosx10.5.pkg
Double click this package file and follow the wizard instructions to install.
The most up-to-date and current source code, binaries, documentation, news, etc., is available on the official website of Python −
Python Official Websitehttps://www.python.org/
You can download Python documentation from the following site. The documentation is available in HTML, PDF and PostScript formats.
Python Documentation Websitewww.python.org/doc/

Setting up PATH

Programs and other executable files can be in many directories. Hence, the operating systems provide a search path that lists the directories that it searches for executables.
The important features are −
  • The path is stored in an environment variable, which is a named string maintained by the operating system. This variable contains information available to the command shell and other programs.
  • The path variable is named as PATH in Unix or Path in Windows (Unix is case-sensitive; Windows is not).
  • In Mac OS, the installer handles the path details. To invoke the Python interpreter from any particular directory, you must add the Python directory to your path.

Setting Path at Unix/Linux

To add the Python directory to the path for a particular session in Unix −
  • In the csh shell − type setenv PATH "$PATH:/usr/local/bin/python3" and press Enter.
  • In the bash shell (Linux) − type export PYTHONPATH=/usr/local/bin/python3.4 and press Enter.
  • In the sh or ksh shell − type PATH="$PATH:/usr/local/bin/python3" and press Enter.
Note − /usr/local/bin/python3 is the path of the Python directory.

Setting Path at Windows

To add the Python directory to the path for a particular session in Windows −
  • At the command prompt − type path %path%;C:\Python and press Enter.
Note − C:\Python is the path of the Python directory

Python Environment Variables

Here are important environment variables, which are recognized by Python −
S.No.Variable & Description
1PYTHONPATH
It has a role similar to PATH. This variable tells the Python interpreter where to locate the module files imported into a program. It should include the Python source library directory and the directories containing Python source code. PYTHONPATH is sometimes preset by the Python installer.
2PYTHONSTARTUP
It contains the path of an initialization file containing Python source code. It is executed every time you start the interpreter. It is named as .pythonrc.py in Unix and it contains commands that load utilities or modify PYTHONPATH.
3PYTHONCASEOK
It is used in Windows to instruct Python to find the first case-insensitive match in an import statement. Set this variable to any value to activate it.
4PYTHONHOME
It is an alternative module search path. It is usually embedded in the PYTHONSTARTUP or PYTHONPATH directories to make switching module libraries easy.

Running Python

There are three different ways to start Python −

Interactive Interpreter

You can start Python from Unix, DOS, or any other system that provides you a command-line interpreter or shell window.
Enter python the command line.
Start coding right away in the interactive interpreter.
$python             # Unix/Linux

or 

python%             # Unix/Linux

or 

C:>python           # Windows/DOS
Here is the list of all the available command line options −
S.No.Option & Description
1-d
provide debug output
2-O
generate optimized bytecode (resulting in .pyo files)
3-S
do not run import site to look for Python paths on startup
4-v
verbose output (detailed trace on import statements)
5-X
disable class-based built-in exceptions (just use strings); obsolete starting with version 1.6
6-c cmd
run Python script sent in as cmd string
7file
run Python script from given file

Script from the Command-line

A Python script can be executed at the command line by invoking the interpreter on your application, as shown in the following example.
$python  script.py          # Unix/Linux

or 

python% script.py           # Unix/Linux

or 

C:>python script.py         # Windows/DOS
Note − Be sure the file permission mode allows execution.

Integrated Development Environment

You can run Python from a Graphical User Interface (GUI) environment as well, if you have a GUI application on your system that supports Python.
  • Unix − IDLE is the very first Unix IDE for Python.
  • WindowsPythonWin is the first Windows interface for Python and is an IDE with a GUI.
  • Macintosh − The Macintosh version of Python along with the IDLE IDE is available from the main website, downloadable as either MacBinary or BinHex'd files.
If you are not able to set up the environment properly, then you can take the help of your system admin. Make sure the Python environment is properly set up and working perfectly fine.
Note − All the examples given in subsequent chapters are executed with Python 3.4.1 version available on Windows 7 and Ubuntu Linux.
We have already set up Python Programming environment online, so that you can execute all the available examples online while you are learning theory. Feel free to modify any example and execute it online.

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