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jinyuz.dev | ||
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blog.nuculabs.de
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| | | | | Hello, In this article I will introduce you to pyenv, a tool for managing python environments. Installing pyenv is pretty straight forward, you'll need to clone the repo and add the binaries to the path. For a typical Debian based distro using the Zsh shell the instructions would be: 1 2 3 4 git clone https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv.git ~/.pyenv echo 'export PYENV_ROOT="$HOME/.pyenv"' >> ~/.zshrc echo 'export PATH="$PYENV_ROOT/bin:$PATH"' >> ~/.zshrc Then, in order for this to take effect, you need to reload the shell with: source ~/.zshrc, or just restart your terminal. | |
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blog.christophersmart.com
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| | | | | [AI summary] A detailed guide explains how to set up a development environment for Ansible on Fedora, covering version management, virtual environments, and Git workflows for contributing code. | |
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github.com
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| | | | | Simple Python version management. Contribute to pyenv/pyenv development by creating an account on GitHub. | |
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snarky.ca
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| | | There are a couple of things I always want to be true when I install Python packages for a project: 1. I have a virtual environment 2. Pip is up-to-date For virtual environments, you would like them to be created as fast as possible and (usually) with the newest version | ||