• Need help please

    From Jack Gilbert@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 10 08:59:30 2023
    I D/L 3.11.3, I can see it in CMD

    running W10 64bit

    I have IDL on my desktop,

    HOW do I get 3.11.3 on my desktop?

    Thanks

    Jack g

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  • From Sravan Kumar Chitikesi@21:1/5 to 00jhenryg@gmail.com on Mon Apr 10 12:41:46 2023
    use where cmd to find out the path of the binary and create a shortcut to
    that file on desktop

    Regards,
    *Sravan Chitikesi*
    AWS Solutions Architect - Associate


    On Mon, Apr 10, 2023 at 10:03 AM Jack Gilbert <00jhenryg@gmail.com> wrote:

    I D/L 3.11.3, I can see it in CMD

    running W10 64bit

    I have IDL on my desktop,

    HOW do I get 3.11.3 on my desktop?

    Thanks

    Jack g
    --
    https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list


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  • From Thomas Passin@21:1/5 to Jack Gilbert on Mon Apr 10 13:17:41 2023
    On 4/10/2023 9:59 AM, Jack Gilbert wrote:
    I D/L 3.11.3, I can see it in CMD

    running W10 64bit

    I have IDL on my desktop,

    HOW do I get 3.11.3 on my desktop?

    If you mean "How can I create a shortcut to Python 3.11.3 on my desktop
    that opens an interactive Python session", here is one way:

    1. Find where your Python 3.11.3 program has been installed. On the
    command line in a console, type:

    py -c "import sys; print(sys.executable)"

    You will get a response like this:

    C:\Users\tom\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python311\python.exe

    NOTE: If the "py" command is not on your computer or does not open
    Python 3.11, then open a python 3.11 session and type the same commands:

    import sys
    print(sys.executable)

    2. Open the Windows file browser ("Windows Explorer") and navigate to
    that directory. On my computer this is

    C:\Users\tom\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python311

    3. Press and hold both the CTRL and SHIFT keys down at the same time,
    and with the mouse drag the icon for "python.exe" to a blank space on
    the desktop. This will not drag the program itself but will create a
    shortcut and drag that.

    4. Test the new shortcut by double-clicking on it and seeing that a new
    console window opens with the Python interpreter running in it.

    If you do not like the size, shape, or font of this new console, change
    them by clicking on the icon in the upper left, then selecting
    "Properties", and making changes in the dialog box that opens. The new
    choices will be used whenever you use this shortcut again.

    5. The new shortcut will probably be named "python.ex". I suggest that
    you rename it to "Python 3.11". This way you can create other python
    shortcuts without having their names conflict.

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