How to run Conda?
Solution 1:
you might want to try this:
for anaconda 2 :
export PATH=~/anaconda2/bin:$PATH
for anaconda 3 :
export PATH=~/anaconda3/bin:$PATH
for anaconda 4 :
Use the Anaconda Prompt
and then
conda --version
to confirm that it worked. The export PATH=~/anaconda3/bin:$PATH works but stops when you exit the terminal in order change that you have to run sudo nano ~/.bashrc and then copy the path into the file and save it after that you activate the changes using source .bashrc.
check with conda install anaconda-navigator if not installed follow the anaconda install instructions again
follow along with this video https://youtu.be/Pr25JlaXhpc
Solution 2:
It turns out that I had not set the path.
To do so, I first had to edit .bash_profile (I downloaded it to my local desktop to do that, I do not know how to text edit a file from linux)
Then add this to .bash_profile:
PATH=$PATH:$HOME/anaconda/bin
Solution 3:
Use conda init
As pointed out in a different answer, manually adding Conda on $PATH
is no longer recommended as of v4.4.0 (see Release Notes). Furthermore, since Conda v4.6 new functionality to manage shell initialization via the conda init
command was introduced. Hence, the updated recommendation is to run
Linux/UNIX (OS X < 10.15)
./anaconda3/bin/conda init
Mac OS X >= 10.15
./anaconda3/bin/conda init zsh
Windows
./anaconda3/Scripts/conda.exe init
You must launch a new shell or source your init file (e.g., source .bashrc
) for the changes to take effect.
Details. For an in-depth look at exactly what conda init
does see this answer.
Alternative shells
You may need to explicitly identify your shell to Conda. For example, if you run zsh
(Mac OS X 10.15+ default) instead of bash
then you would run
./anaconda3/bin/conda init zsh
Please see ./anaconda3/bin/conda init --help
for a comprehensive list of supported shells.
Word of Caution
I'd recommend running the above command with a --dry-run|-d
flag and a verbosity (-v
) flag, in order to see exactly what it would do. If you don't already have a Conda-managed section in your shell run commands file (e.g., .bashrc
), then this should appear like a straight-forward insertion of some new lines. If it isn't such a straightforward insertion, I'd recommend clearing any previous Conda sections from $PATH
and the relevant shell initialization files (e.g., bashrc
) first.
Again, for those interested, there is an in-depth look at how it works, in this answer.
Potential Automated Cleanup
Conda v4.6.9 introduced a --reverse
flag that automates removing the changes that are inserted by conda init
.