ChatGPT解决这个技术问题 Extra ChatGPT

Which version of Python do I have installed?

I have to run a Python script on a Windows server. How can I know which version of Python I have, and does it even really matter?

I was thinking of updating to the latest version of Python.

Yes, the (major) version number matters. Make sure you select python documentation that matches your python version.
If you want to also find out what Python is associated with .py files you might be interested in a batch file in How to write a batch file showing path to executable and version of Python handling Python scripts on Windows?
Related: Is there a guaranteed way to see all versions of Python that are available/installed on your Linux system?
@esteban: None of the answers are Windows-specific, and titles don't need tags anyway. Rolled back.
Related thread to check python version from python script/program - How do I check what version of Python is running my script?

D
Dov
python -V

http://docs.python.org/using/cmdline.html#generic-options

--version may also work (introduced in version 2.5)


On my Windows 8.1 Pro machine, Python 2.7.10 outputs Python 2.7.10 for -V and --version; and Python 3.4.3 similarly outputs Python 3.4.3 for both options too.
you could have several other versions of python too, something like this sudo find / -iname python would probably discover them.
@PatrickT this post was about python on windows server, sudo and find would confuse some newbies, as they wouldn't work on windows
not to be confused with python -v (lowercase v) which increases the logging verbosity
If you are building an API please consider allowing both -v and -version aliases. Clearly about 500 developers had to look this up and upvote this answer for Python on SO. That's a bad design
P
Peter Mortensen

In a Python IDE, just copy and paste in the following code and run it (the version will come up in the output area):

import sys
print(sys.version)

This answers the question "what version am I running", which solved a problem I was having with environment configurations (thanks). Many computers have multiple Python versions installed.
This is more useful than -v command, since it tells architecture of the installed python (32bit or 64bit)
This is also a good solution because it which works for Python 3.x
Works well on Anaconda Spyder IDE. Alternatively, on normal Anaconda Prompt one can use python --version
But this is on a Windows server. There may not be an IDE installed.
m
mcandre

Python 2.5+:

python --version

Python 2.4-:

python -c 'import sys; print(sys.version)'

Note: The interpreter may not use the same Python version as the one that runs your scripts. I think there's some circumstances where, by default, your interpreter is Python 3, but your scripts are run in Python 2 (need #!python3 as the first line).
NOTE: On Windows, you need to go to the "Python (command line)" to enter the above steps.
This answer is more useful, the script would get ability, to run or not.
This worked for me once I used double-quotes around the statement. python -c "import sys; print sys.version"
Can you update your answer wrt. to Windows? See other comments. Thanks in advance.
E
Eric Leschinski

At a command prompt type:

python -V

Or if you have pyenv:

pyenv versions

P
Peter Mortensen

Although the question is "which version am I using?", this may not actually be everything you need to know. You may have other versions installed and this can cause problems, particularly when installing additional modules. This is my rough-and-ready approach to finding out what versions are installed:

updatedb                  # Be in root for this
locate site.py            # All installations I've ever seen have this

The output for a single Python installation should look something like this:

/usr/lib64/python2.7/site.py
/usr/lib64/python2.7/site.pyc
/usr/lib64/python2.7/site.pyo

Multiple installations will have output something like this:

/root/Python-2.7.6/Lib/site.py
/root/Python-2.7.6/Lib/site.pyc
/root/Python-2.7.6/Lib/site.pyo
/root/Python-2.7.6/Lib/test/test_site.py
/usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages/site.py
/usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages/site.pyc
/usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages/site.pyo
/usr/lib64/python2.6/site.py
/usr/lib64/python2.6/site.pyc
/usr/lib64/python2.6/site.pyo
/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site.py
/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site.pyc
/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site.pyo
/usr/local/lib/python2.7/test/test_site.py
/usr/local/lib/python2.7/test/test_site.pyc
/usr/local/lib/python2.7/test/test_site.pyo

updatedb? That is Linux. The question was about a Windows server.
p
poy

When I open Python (command line) the first thing it tells me is the version.


This should be the right answer for windows. I tried for hours with "python" but didn't work. Then I typed "Python" which worked. +1 for correctly providing the command.
Do you mean pressing the Windows key and typing "Python"? Or something else?
d
ddzzbbwwmm
In [1]: import sys

In [2]: sys.version
2.7.11 |Anaconda 2.5.0 (64-bit)| (default, Dec  6 2015, 18:08:32) 
[GCC 4.4.7 20120313 (Red Hat 4.4.7-1)]

In [3]: sys.version_info
sys.version_info(major=2, minor=7, micro=11, releaselevel='final', serial=0)

In [4]: sys.version_info >= (2,7)
Out[4]: True

In [5]: sys.version_info >= (3,)
Out[5]: False

m
mar10

In short:

Type python in a command prompt

Simply open the command prompt (Win + R) and type cmd and in the command prompt then typing python will give you all necessary information regarding versions:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/K5kSC.png


This is practically identical to poy's answer.
This actually took me to the MS Store for Python.
P
Peter Mortensen

I have Python 3.7.0 on Windows 10.

This is what worked for me in the command prompt and Git Bash:

To run Python and check the version:

py

To only check which version you have:

py --version

or

py -V    # Make sure it is a capital V

Note: python, python --version, python -V,Python, Python --version, Python -V did not work for me.


python -V works back to Fedora 1 with Python 2.2.3. py --version results in command not found. python --version results in unknown option: --.
B
Baczek
>>> import sys; print('{0[0]}.{0[1]}'.format(sys.version_info))
3.5

so from the command line:

python -c "import sys; print('{0[0]}.{0[1]}'.format(sys.version_info))"

P
Peter Mortensen

Use

python -V

or

python --version

NOTE: Please note that the "V" in the python -V command is capital V. python -v (small "v") will launch Python in verbose mode.


P
Peter Mortensen

You can get the version of Python by using the following command

python --version

You can even get the version of any package installed in venv using pip freeze as:

pip freeze | grep "package name"

Or using the Python interpreter as:

In [1]: import django
In [2]: django.VERSION
Out[2]: (1, 6, 1, 'final', 0)

n
nucsit026

To check the Python version in a Jupyter notebook, you can use:

from platform import python_version
print(python_version())

to get version number, as:

3.7.3

or:

import sys
print(sys.version)

to get more information, as

3.7.3 (default, Apr 24 2019, 13:20:13) [MSC v.1915 32 bit (Intel)]

or:

sys.version_info

to get major, minor and micro versions, as

sys.version_info(major=3, minor=7, micro=3, releaselevel='final', serial=0)

S
Sam

On Windows 10 with Python 3.9.1, using the command line:

    py -V

Python 3.9.1

    py --version

Python 3.9.1

    py -VV

Python 3.9.1 (tags/v3.9.1:1e5d33e, Dec  7 2020, 17:08:21) [MSC v.1927 64 bit 
(AMD64)]

I've updated this for version 3.9.1, as the previous syntax in Windows 10 now takes you to a link to Python in the Microsoft store, rather than displaying version details (this can be changed here superuser.com/questions/1437590/…) . The original answer was for python 3.6, the current version is 3.9.1. The syntax has since changed from python to py.
also the -V needs to be capitalised, otherwise the command line will just open python. If this happens, just Ctrl+Z and Enter to exit.
P
Peter Mortensen

If you are already in a REPL window and don't see the welcome message with the version number, you can use help() to see the major and minor version:

>>>help()
Welcome to Python 3.6's help utility!
...

P
Pro Q

Typing where python on Windows into a Command Prompt may tell you where multiple different versions of python are installed, assuming they have been added to your path.

Typing python -V into the Command Prompt should display the version.


S
Sagar_c_k

If you have Python installed then the easiest way you can check the version number is by typing "python" in your command prompt. It will show you the version number and if it is running on 32 bit or 64 bit and some other information. For some applications you would want to have a latest version and sometimes not. It depends on what packages you want to install or use.


This is practically identical to poy's answer.
P
Peter Mortensen

To verify the Python version for commands on Windows, run the following commands in a command prompt and verify the output:

c:\> python -V
Python 2.7.16

c:\> py -2 -V
Python 2.7.16

c:\> py -3 -V
Python 3.7.3

Also, to see the folder configuration for each Python version, run the following commands:

For Python 2, 'py -2 -m site'
For Python 3, 'py -3 -m site'

P
Peter Mortensen

For me, opening CMD and running

py

will show something like

Python 3.4.3 (v3.4.3:9b73f1c3e601, Feb 24 2015, 22:43:06) [MSC v.1600 32 bit (Intel)] on win32

Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.

Is this on Windows? What Python implementation? Anaconda? (Respond by editing your answer, not here in comments (as appropriate))
P
Peter Mortensen

Just create a file ending with .py and paste the code below into and run it.

#!/usr/bin/python3.6

import platform
import sys

def linux_dist():
  try:
    return platform.linux_distribution()
  except:
    return "N/A"

print("""Python version: %s
dist: %s
linux_distribution: %s
system: %s
machine: %s
platform: %s
uname: %s
version: %s
""" % (
sys.version.split('\n'),
str(platform.dist()),
linux_dist(),
platform.system(),
platform.machine(),
platform.platform(),
platform.uname(),
platform.version(),
))

If several Python interpreter versions are installed on a system, run the following commands.

On Linux, run in a terminal:

ll /usr/bin/python*

On Windows, run in a command prompt:

dir %LOCALAPPDATA%\Programs\Python

The question was about Windows, not Linux.
K
KittoMi

Mostly usage commands:

python -version

Or

python -V

G
Giorgos Myrianthous

For bash scripts this would be the easiest way:

# In the form major.minor.micro e.g. '3.6.8'
# The second part excludes the 'Python ' prefix 
PYTHON_VERSION=`python3 --version | awk '{print $2}'`
echo "python3 version: ${PYTHON_VERSION}"
python3 version: 3.6.8

And if you just need the major.minor version (e.g. 3.6) you can either use the above and then pick the first 3 characters:

PYTHON_VERSION=`python3 --version | awk '{print $2}'`
echo "python3 major.minor: ${PYTHON_VERSION:0:3}"
python3 major.minor: 3.6

or

PYTHON_VERSION=`python3 -c 'import sys; print(str(sys.version_info[0])+"."+str(sys.version_info[1]))'`
echo "python3 major.minor: ${PYTHON_VERSION}"
python3 major.minor: 3.6

S
Szczerski

The default Python version and the paths of all installed versions on Windows:

py -0p

P
Peter Mortensen

Open a command prompt window (press Windows + R, type in cmd, and hit Enter).

Type python.exe


This is practically identical to poy's answer.