This command will fetch and install the free PySide6, so you can use it with Python 3.7. In PIP-speak “upgrade” just means… “get another version than the current one, and here’s the old version number”. For Windows 7 you’ll need this “last good version” which was PySide 6.1.3 (Xmas 2021). It doesn’t matter which directory you are in when you type the command. ![]() In it, manually type an install command such as… Some people call it a ‘console’ or a ‘DOS box’. Windows Start | Search Programs box | and there type cmdĪ Windows Command window opens. Now your Python should be able to get online and go fetch stuff.Ĥ. TinyWall), then whitelist the python.exe and also all the various PIP. If you have a “block all outbound, unless I say so” type of firewall (e.g. You’ve now told Windows to go look in the Python 3.7 folder when it gets a PIP command.ģ. Eyeball it to ensure it looks correct, and then OK | exit. Now copy the whole lot back into the “Variable value” slot, overwriting what’s there. Don’t forget or overlook the vital starting \Scripts and not to the main Python folder. C:\Users\USER_NAME\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python37\Scripts Sure you got all of it? OK then carefully append the following to the end of the string… Paste what you copied from the Path’s “Variable value” slot, to Notepad. But Windows 7 users have to do it this way, the rough-tough way. Windows 8 users will flaunt their fancy user-interface in tutorials here. Highlight and copy everything in the “Variable value” slot. Scroll down to and select “Path” and then click “Edit”. In Windows 7 go: Start | Control Panel | System and Security | System | Advanced | Environment Variables | System Variables. PIPs are what fetch and install external Python coding goodies, and plug them into your Python.Ģ. ![]() \Scripts directory is where the PIP exe files live. It may be directly under the main C:\ drive for you, but for me this is…Ĭ:\Users\USER_NAME\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python37\Ĭ:\Users\USER_NAME\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python37\Scripts ![]() Locate your already installed Python 3.7. How to get PIP recognised and working on Windows 7, and get the Win7 version of PySide 6:ġ. But I want to link this from this blog’s “Will it Run on Windows 7?” page. Excuse the non-arty Python post, dear creative reader.
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