
Security News
Opengrep Adds Apex Support and New Rule Controls in Latest Updates
The latest Opengrep releases add Apex scanning, precision rule tuning, and performance gains for open source static code analysis.
A utility to find python versions on your system.
This library is a rewrite of pythonfinder project by @techalchemy. It simplifies the whole code structure while preserving most of the original features.
FindPython is installable via any kind of package manager including pip
:
pip install findpython
>>> import findpython
>>> findpython.find(3, 9) # Find by major and minor version
<PythonVersion executable=PosixPath('/opt/homebrew/bin/python3.9'), version=<Version('3.9.10')>, architecture='64bit', major=3, minor=9, patch=10>
>>> findpython.find("3.9") # Find by version string
<PythonVersion executable=PosixPath('/opt/homebrew/bin/python3.9'), version=<Version('3.9.10')>, architecture='64bit', major=3, minor=9, patch=10>
>>> findpython.find("3.9-32") # Find by version string and architecture
<PythonVersion executable=WindowsPath('C:\\Python\\3.9-32\\python.exe'), version=<Version('3.9.10')>, architecture='32bit', major=3, minor=9, patch=10>
>>> findpython.find(name="python3") # Find by executable name
<PythonVersion executable=PosixPath('/Users/fming/Library/PythonUp/bin/python3'), version=<Version('3.10.2')>, architecture='64bit', major=3, minor=10, patch=2>
>>> findpython.find("python3") # Find by executable name without keyword argument, same as above
<PythonVersion executable=PosixPath('/Users/fming/Library/PythonUp/bin/python3'), version=<Version('3.10.2')>, architecture='64bit', major=3, minor=10, patch=2>
>>> findpython.find_all(major=3, minor=9) # Same arguments as `find()`, but return all matches
[<PythonVersion executable=PosixPath('/opt/homebrew/bin/python3.9'), version=<Version('3.9.10')>, architecture='64bit', major=3, minor=9, patch=10>, <PythonVersion executable=PosixPath('/opt/homebrew/bin/python3'), version=<Version('3.9.10')>, architecture='64bit', major=3, minor=9, patch=10>, <PythonVersion executable=PosixPath('/Users/fming/Library/PythonUp/cmd/python3.9'), version=<Version('3.9.9')>, architecture='64bit', major=3, minor=9, patch=9>, <PythonVersion executable=PosixPath('/usr/local/bin/python3.9'), version=<Version('3.9.5')>, architecture='64bit', major=3, minor=9, patch=5>, <PythonVersion executable=PosixPath('/usr/local/bin/python3'), version=<Version('3.9.5')>, architecture='64bit', major=3, minor=9, patch=5>]
In addition, FindPython provides a CLI interface to find python versions:
usage: findpython [-h] [-V] [-a] [--resolve-symlink] [-v] [--no-same-file] [--no-same-python] [--providers PROVIDERS]
[version_spec]
A utility to find python versions on your system
positional arguments:
version_spec Python version spec or name
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-V, --version show program's version number and exit
-a, --all Show all matching python versions
--resolve-symlink Resolve all symlinks
-v, --verbose Verbose output
--no-same-file Eliminate the duplicated results with the same file contents
--no-same-python Eliminate the duplicated results with the same sys.executable
--providers PROVIDERS
Select provider(s) to use
FindPython finds Python from the following places:
PATH
environment variable/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions
(MacOS)FindPython is released under MIT License.
FAQs
A utility to find python versions on your system
We found that findpython demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
The latest Opengrep releases add Apex scanning, precision rule tuning, and performance gains for open source static code analysis.
Security News
npm now supports Trusted Publishing with OIDC, enabling secure package publishing directly from CI/CD workflows without relying on long-lived tokens.
Research
/Security News
A RubyGems malware campaign used 60 malicious packages posing as automation tools to steal credentials from social media and marketing tool users.