This page describes how Python is handled in Homebrew for users. See Python for Formula Authors for advice on writing formulae to install packages written in Python.
Homebrew should work with any CPython and defaults to the macOS system Python.
Homebrew provides formulae to brew Python 3.x and a more up-to-date Python 2.7.x.
Important: If you choose to install a Python which isn’t either of these two (system Python or brewed Python), the Homebrew team cannot support any breakage that may occur.
Homebrew provides one formula for Python 3.x (python
) and another for Python 2.7.x (python@2
).
The executables are organized as follows so that Python 2 and Python 3 can both be installed without conflict:
python3
points to Homebrew’s Python 3.x (if installed)python2
points to Homebrew’s Python 2.7.x (if installed)python
points to Homebrew’s Python 2.7.x (if installed) otherwise the macOS system Python. Check out brew info python
if you wish to add Homebrew’s 3.x python
to your PATH
.pip3
points to Homebrew’s Python 3.x’s pip (if installed)pip
and pip2
point to Homebrew’s Python 2.7.x’s pip (if installed)(Wondering which one to choose?)
The Python formulae install pip (as pip
or pip2
) and Setuptools.
Setuptools can be updated via pip, without having to re-brew Python:
python -m pip install --upgrade setuptools
Similarly, pip can be used to upgrade itself via:
python -m pip install --upgrade pip
pip install --user
The normal pip install --user
is disabled for brewed Python. This is because of a bug in distutils, because Homebrew writes a distutils.cfg
which sets the package prefix
.
A possible workaround (which puts executable scripts in ~/Library/Python/<X>.<Y>/bin
) is:
python -m pip install --user --install-option="--prefix=" <package-name>
site-packages
and the PYTHONPATH
The site-packages
is a directory that contains Python modules (especially bindings installed by other formulae). Homebrew creates it here:
$(brew --prefix)/lib/pythonX.Y/site-packages
So, for Python 3.y.z, you’ll find it at /usr/local/lib/python3.y/site-packages
.
Python 3.y also searches for modules in:
/Library/Python/3.y/site-packages
~/Library/Python/3.y/lib/python/site-packages
Homebrew’s site-packages
directory is first created if (1) any Homebrew formula with Python bindings are installed, or (2) upon brew install python
.
The reasoning for this location is to preserve your modules between (minor) upgrades or re-installations of Python. Additionally, Homebrew has a strict policy never to write stuff outside of the brew --prefix
, so we don’t spam your system.
Some formulae provide Python bindings. Sometimes a --with-python
or --with-python@2
option has to be passed to brew install
in order to build the Python bindings. (Check with brew options <formula>
.)
Warning! Python may crash (see Common Issues) if you import <module>
from a brewed Python if you ran brew install <formula_with_python_bindings>
against the system Python. If you decide to switch to the brewed Python, then reinstall all formulae with Python bindings (e.g. pyside
, wxwidgets
, pygtk
, pygobject
, opencv
, vtk
and boost-python
).
These should be installed via pip install <package>
. To discover, you can use pip search
or https://pypi.python.org/pypi.
Note: macOS’s system Python does not provide pip
. Follow the pip documentation to install it for your system Python if you would like it.
For brewed Python, modules installed with pip
or python setup.py install
will be installed to the $(brew --prefix)/lib/pythonX.Y/site-packages
directory (explained above). Executable Python scripts will be in $(brew --prefix)/bin
.
The system Python may not know which compiler flags to set in order to build bindings for software installed in Homebrew so you may need to run:
CFLAGS=-I$(brew --prefix)/include LDFLAGS=-L$(brew --prefix)/lib pip install <package>
WARNING: When you brew install
formulae that provide Python bindings, you should not be in an active virtual environment.
Activate the virtualenv after you’ve brewed, or brew in a fresh terminal window. Homebrew will still install Python modules into Homebrew’s site-packages
and not into the virtual environment’s site-package.
Virtualenv has a --system-site-packages
switch to allow “global” (i.e. Homebrew’s) site-packages
to be accessible from within the virtualenv.
Formulae that declare an unconditional dependency on the "python"
or "python@2"
formulae are bottled against Homebrew’s Python 3.x or 2.7.x and require it to be installed.
© 2009–present Homebrew contributors
Licensed under the BSD 2-Clause License.
https://docs.brew.sh/Homebrew-and-Python