Updating Python on Ubuntu system
As others already noted, bare sudo apt-get install package
will install latest available version, replacing the older one if needed.
But with some software (among which is Python) the situation is somewhat different. Some major, very- and incompatibly-different versions get their own packages. For instance, Python 2.6, Python 2.7, Python 3.1 all live in separate packages on Ubuntu.
Of particular importance is the fact that one of Ubuntu policies is to extensively use Python for writing end-user software. So in fact, fairly large part of the system is written in Python. At the moment, the code runs on Python 2.6 — so this version is the default upon installation; and the code won't easily run on, say, Python 2.7 — because incompatibilities exist. To switch the system to Python 2.7 there needs to be done a piece of work, consisting of updating and re-testing all the scripts. This can't be done easily; that is, you can't just "switch" your system to Python 2.7 and delete the older version.
But. If you don't care about fancy gears of your system and just need newer Python — see no obstacles. Go and sudo apt-get install python3
and code for 3.x Python bravely; just remember to launch your scripts with python3
and use #!/usr/bin/env python3
shebang line.
Upd: I keep seeing this upvoted; notice that this is a 9-year old answer, things have changed.
What to learn next
From a superuser perspective (not Python developer's), the next things I'd suggest learning to use:
pip
/pip3
/python3 -m pip
— this is thenpm
for Python. Quick tip: trypip3 install --user howdoi
(may need toapt install python3-setuptools python3-pip
once, before that works). Then for example,howdoi --all compile python3 ubuntu
.The
virtualenv
tool. It's 100% developer-oriented, but you'll likely need to use it (perhaps underneath a few wrappers, such astox
) to work with people's source packages.
Ruby'sbundler
or Cabal sandbox may be familiar analogues.The
conda
tool — which is a totally separate python package repository and installer (think: fork of PyPi).
There's humongous variety of tools in the Python ecosystem in 2020. At the very least, make yourself comfortable with pip
before going deeper.
Basic pitfalls
For the brave but unwary, a few classic pitfalls when trying to manually set up a newer CPython on Ubuntu.
Leave
/usr
alone; you can look but you don't touch. Leave it todpkg
, save yourself some confusion. You have the whole/usr/local
at your disposal:sudo chown -R `whoami` /usr/local pip3 install --prefix=/usr/local pydf
Compiling CPython from source is well-explained on the web; just don't forget your
/usr/local
prefix. This is the best way to manually test patches and/or pre-releases (those alpha-, rc- builds) of CPython itself. To wipe built artifacts, you can justrm -rf /usr/local/*; sudo ldconfig
.Finding a PPA is decent option too; keep in mind that a PPA is just someone else's private build. Look for credible PPAs with CI/CD running.
sudo apt-get install python 3.3.3
this is for python(3.3.3) for different version the corresponding version number should be used.
sudo apt-get install python3.6
This installs python 3 in linux along side python 2.To access python 3 enter after you opened the terminal.
python3