Sadly I can't advise on Windows 11. Nor am I across Anaconda and I don't know 
what Spyder is.The path is where Windows looks for a program if you don't 
specify where it is. You will need to google the location of the path 
environment variable on Windows 11.Good luck - I'm sure you will enjoy Python. 
BTW - there is not a lot of difference between Python versions for beginners. 
You would be best to stick with the version you have installed until you are 
more comfortable with the lay of the land.M--(Unsigned mail from my phone)
-------- Original message --------From: B N <beco...@hotmail.com> Date: 
24/10/22  19:27  (GMT+10:00) To: Mike Dewhirst <mi...@dewhirst.com.au> Subject: 
Re: Update from 3.9 to 3.10.8 and uninstall 3.9 

Thank you, that was quick.. My problem is/are the technical terms such as path 
and environment . It took me about 10 hours, (I am retired so have time), to 
upgrade to Spyder 5.3.3 because the input command didn't work; the solution 
offered by Spyder did not
 work. I am grateful . I shall now try to understand how to activate  anaconda 
environment and path. I have Windows 11.



Best wishes

John







From: Mike Dewhirst
Sent: Sunday, October 23, 2022 22:46
To: B N; python-l...@python.org
Subject: Re: Update from 3.9 to 3.10.8 and uninstall 3.9





On 23/10/2022 9:13 pm, B N wrote:


I am new to python and wish to update 3.9 to3.10.8 which I have downloaded. How 
do I replace 3.9 with the 3.10.8 I downloaded.
Kind regards
JohnGee



It depends on the operating system. 

Typically, you can just install the new version and adjust your environment 
vars (ie., path) to point to the new version instead of the old.

The theoretical reason is that you may have other programs/scripts etc which 
still rely on the old version.

If you are new to Python, you should probably avoid installing later versions 
until you have studied virtual environments. A venv will let you keep your 
"system" Python(s) clean and unencumbered while being able to experiment with 
all sorts of additional libraries,
 packages etc in multiple separate sub-environments.

Cheers

Mike
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