What you see may be different from the screenshot above, because the output depends on your Terminal configuration.įor example, instead of ~/.zshrc, your may see ~/.profile or ~/.bashrc. Now we need to configure PyEnv so it loads when we open our Terminal. Important! Take note of the two outputs highlighted above (they may be different on your machine). Once installation is complete, you’ll see something like this: Screenshot of output after PyEnv is installed. pyenv – this is the name of the package we want to install (Tip: you can find other packages by using the search on brew.sh).install – this is the command that tells (Home)brew that we want to install something.brew – this is the package manager we installed above.In-case you’re curious, I’ll translate the command below: This can be done by running the command below: brew install pyenv Screenshot of typing the pyenv installation command Once Homebrew is installed, we can use it to install PyEnv. Once it’s done, you should see something like this: Brew installed successfully. You’ll need to enter your administrator password and follow the on-screen instructions: Screenshot of Terminal after pasting Brew.sh installation command. This one-line command (taken from the brew.sh website) will download and run a script that will install Homebrew on your machine. To install it, copy the line below and paste it into your Terminal window: /bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL )" If you haven’t used it before, Homebrew is a popular package manager for macOS. We’ll install PyEnv using a tool called Homebrew.
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