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I am using Visual Studio Code for my Python programming and the problem that I am facing is that on terminal when I type the command python, by default Python 2.7 is loaded. So because of this I am not able to debug my Python 3 commands on my Ubuntu Budgie.

What should I do in order to uninstall Python 2.7 and make 3.7 as my default Python? I have uninstalled Python 2.7 by using the command sudo apt-get remove python. Even after doing this, I have to type python3 to load Python 3.7 and I get an error when just I type python.

How do I make my Python 3 default so that when I type python, Python 3.7 starts?

-Codec Leaper

wjandrea
  • 14,504

1 Answers1

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The simplest is to make an alias in your .bashrc.

To do so open your .bashrc with:

nano ~/.bashrc 

or

nano ~/.bash_aliases

and add in the section # some more aliases a new line containing

alias python='python3'

Open a new terminal and it should work fine.

NOTE: It's not recommended to make a symbolic link in your /usr/bin.

For visual studio code: The settings for python3 has to be set within the program - look at this link how to set the right python path.

abu_bua
  • 11,313