> > 9a0d86eb (from https://pypi.org/simple/aiorpcx/) (requires-
> > python:>=3.6) is incompatible with the pythonversion in use.
> > Acceptable
> > python versions are:>=3.6
>
> Ok, so it clearly says you need a Python version greater
> than or equal to 3.6. Which version of Python are you using?
On 03/05/2019 17:11, Anil Duggirala wrote:
>> Try this (as _yourself_, not as root):
>>
>> pip3 install --verbose --user 'aiorpcX<0.18,>=0.17.0'
>
> I tried this and got a lot of messages like:
...
> 9a0d86eb (from https://pypi.org/simple/aiorpcx/) (requires-
> python:>=3.6) is incompatible wit
On Fri, 2019-05-03 at 10:14 +1000, Cameron Simpson wrote:
> On 02May2019 17:24, Anil Duggirala wrote:
> > I executed the pip3 install --user -r
> > contrib/requirements/requirements.txt (I actually did sudo before
> > that).
>
> Please don't use sudo for this. The notion "install" does not impl
On 5/2/19 6:14 PM, Cameron Simpson wrote:
> On 02May2019 17:24, Anil Duggirala wrote:
>> I executed the pip3 install --user -r
>> contrib/requirements/requirements.txt (I actually did sudo before that).
>
> Please don't use sudo for this. The notion "install" does not imply
> being root.
> The w
On 02May2019 17:24, Anil Duggirala wrote:
I executed the pip3 install --user -r
contrib/requirements/requirements.txt (I actually did sudo before
that).
Please don't use sudo for this. The notion "install" does not imply
being root.
The whole point of --user is to install packages in your
hello,
I executed the pip3 install --user -r contrib/requirements/requirements.txt (I
actually did sudo before that). I then interrupted the process with Ctrl-C.
Now, when I execute the same command I get:
Collecting aiorpcX<0.18,>=0.17.0 (from -r contrib/requirements/requirements.txt
(line 5))
On 10/05/2018 09:50 AM, Adam Eyring wrote:
> Hi all,
> I just joined since I'm new to working in python for data management and
> have been stumped on using pip. My understanding is that it should be in my
> scripts folder of Windows Python3.6 (downloaded from python.org), but it's
> not, so it doe
Hi all,
I just joined since I'm new to working in python for data management and
have been stumped on using pip. My understanding is that it should be in my
scripts folder of Windows Python3.6 (downloaded from python.org), but it's
not, so it doesn't work to run "pip install ". I see there's
get-pi