On 6 August 2012 20:07, Alex Clark <aclark@aclark.net> wrote:
On 8/6/12 5:48 AM, Scott Sinclair wrote:
On 6 August 2012 11:04, Petro <x.piter@gmail.com> wrote:
This is a general python question but I will ask it here. To install a new numpy on Debian testing I remove installed version with "aptitude purge python-numpy" download numpy source code and install numpy with "sudo python setup.py install". If I want to remove the installed numpy how do I proceed?
Assuming your system Python is 2.7, your numpy should have been installed in /usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/ (or /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/ as on Ubuntu?)
So something along these lines:
$ sudo rm -rf /usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/numpy/ $ sudo rm -rf /usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/numpy-*.egg* $ sudo rm -rf /usr/local/bin/f2py
Or if you have pip installed (easy_install pip) you can:
$ pip uninstall numpy
(it will uninstall things it hasn't installed, which I think should include the console_script f2py?)
Unfortunately that won't work in this case. If pip wasn't used to install the package it has no way know what's been installed. That information is stored in "site-packages/package-ver-pyver.egg-info/installed-files.txt" which doesn't exist if pip isn't used for the install. Cheers, Scott