Import Error: No module named numpy

Question:

I have a very similar question to this question, but still one step behind. I have only one version of Python 3 installed on my Windows 7 (sorry) 64-bit system.

I installed numpy following this link – as suggested in the question. The installation went fine but when I execute

import numpy

I got the following error:

Import error: No module named numpy

I know this is probably a super basic question, but I’m still learning.

Thanks

Asked By: Seb

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Answers:

Support for Python 3 was added in NumPy version 1.5.0, so to begin with, you must download/install a newer version of NumPy.

Or simply using pip:

python3 -m pip install numpy
Answered By: unutbu

You installed the Numpy Version for Python 2.6 – so you can only use it with Python 2.6. You have to install Numpy for Python 3.x, e.g. that one: http://sourceforge.net/projects/numpy/files/NumPy/1.6.1/numpy-1.6.1-win32-superpack-python3.2.exe/download

For an overview of the different versions, see here: http://sourceforge.net/projects/numpy/files/NumPy/1.6.1/

Answered By: naeg

I had this problem too after I installed Numpy. I solved it by just closing the Python interpreter and reopening. It may be something else to try if anyone else has this problem, perhaps it will save a few minutes!

Answered By: Chet

I think there are something wrong with the installation of numpy.
Here are my steps to solve this problem.

  1. go to this website to download correct package: http://sourceforge.net/projects/numpy/files/
  2. unzip the package
  3. go to the document
  4. use this command to install numpy: python setup.py install
Answered By: Haimei

I also had this problem (Import Error: No module named numpy) but in my case it was a problem with my PATH variables in Mac OS X. I had made an earlier edit to my .bash_profile file that caused the paths for my Anaconda installation (and others) to not be added properly.

Just adding this comment to the list here in case other people like me come to this page with the same error message and have the same problem as I had.

Answered By: Bill

You can simply use

pip install numpy

Or for python3, use

pip3 install numpy

this is the problem of the numpy’s version, please check out $CAFFE_ROOT/python/requirement.txt. Then exec: sudo apt-get install python-numpy>=x.x.x, this problem will be sloved.

Answered By: zhangyi

I’m not sure exactly why I was getting the error, but pip3 uninstall numpy then pip3 install numpy resolved the issue for me.

Answered By: Clay H

I too faced the above problem with phyton 3 while setting up python for machine learning.

I followed the below steps :-

Install python-2.7.13.msi

• set PATH=C:Python27

• set PATH=C:Python27Scripts

Go to http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/#scipy

Downloaded:- — numpy-1.13.1+mkl-cp27-cp27m-win32.whl

          --scipy-0.18.0-cp27-cp27m-win32.whl 

Installing numpy:
pip install numpy-1.13.1+mkl-cp27-cp27m-win32.whl

Installing scipy:
pip install scipy-0.18.0-cp27-cp27m-win32.whl

You can test the correctness using below cmds:-

>>> import numpy
>>> import scipy
>>> import sklearn
>>> numpy.version.version
'1.13.1'
>>> scipy.version.version
'0.19.1'
>>>
Answered By: Vikram S

For installing NumPy via Anaconda(use below commands):

  • conda install -c conda-forge numpy
  • conda install -c conda-forge/label/broken numpy
Answered By: Rashmi Nagpal

Installing Numpy on Windows

  1. Open Windows command prompt with administrator privileges (quick method: Press the Windows key. Type “cmd”. Right-click on the
    suggested “Command Prompt” and select “Run as Administrator)
  2. Navigate to the Python installation directory’s Scripts folder using the “cd” (change directory) command. e.g. “cd C:Program Files (x86)PythonXXScripts”

This might be: C:Users\AppDataLocalProgramsPythonPythonXXScripts or C:Program Files (x86)PythonXXScripts (where XX represents the Python version number), depending on where it was installed. It may be easier to find the folder using Windows explorer, and then paste or type the address from the Explorer address bar into the command prompt.

  1. Enter the following command: “pip install numpy”.

You should see something similar to the following text appear as the package is downloaded and installed.

Collecting numpy
  Downloading numpy-1.13.3-2-cp27-none-win32.whl (6.7MB)  
  100% |################################| 6.7MB 112kB/s
Installing collected packages: numpy
Successfully installed numpy-1.13.3

Those who are using xonsh, do xpip install numpy.

Answered By: Necktwi
import numpy as np
ImportError: No module named numpy 

I got this even though I knew numpy was installed and unsuccessfully tried all the advice above. The fix for me was to remove the as np and directly refer to modules . (python 3.4.8 on Centos)
.

import numpy
DataTwo=numpy.stack((OutputListUnixTwo))...
Answered By: zzapper

I had numpy installed on the same environment both by pip and by conda, and simply removing and reinstalling either was not enough.

I had to reinstall both.

I don’t know why it suddenly happened, but the solution was

pip uninstall numpy

conda uninstall numpy

uninstalling from conda also removed torch and torchvision.

then

conda install pytorch-cpu torchvision-cpu -c pytorch

and

pip install numpy

this resolved the issue for me.

Answered By: Gulzar

Faced with same issue

ImportError: No module named numpy

So, in our case (we are use PIP and python 2.7) the solution was SPLIT pip install commands :

From

RUN pip install numpy scipy pandas sklearn

TO

RUN pip install numpy scipy
RUN pip install pandas sklearn

Solution found here : https://github.com/pandas-dev/pandas/issues/25193, it’s related latest update of pandas to v0.24.0

Answered By: Nigrimmist

For those using python 2.7, should try:

apt-get install -y python-numpy

Instead of pip install numpy

Answered By: georgeos

You can try:

py -3 -m  pip install anyPackageName

In your case use:

py -3 -m  pip install numpy
Answered By: Clinton Roy

You should try to install numpy using one of those:

pip install numpy
pip2 install numpy
pip3 install numpy

For some reason in my case pip2 solved the problem

Answered By: Ateik

For me, on windows 10, I had unknowingly installed multiple python versions (One from PyCharm IDE and another from Windows store). I uninstalled the one from windows Store and just to be thorough, uninstalled numpy pip uninstall numpy and then installed it again pip install numpy. It worked in the terminal in PyCharm and also in command prompt.

Answered By: Shubhzgang

solution for me – I installed numpy inside a virtual environment, but then running ipython was not inside virtual env:

(venv) ➜  which python
/Users/alon/code/google_photos_project/venv/bin/python
(venv) ➜  which ipython
/usr/bin/ipython

so I had to install ipython, and run ipython from the venv like this:

python -c 'import IPython; IPython.terminal.ipapp.launch_new_instance()'
Answered By: Alon Gouldman

I was trying to use NumPy in Intellij but was facing the same issue so, I figured out that NumPy also comes with pandas. So, I installed pandas with IntelliJ tip and later on was able to import NumPy. Might help someone someday!

Answered By: whatsinthename

As stated in other answers, this error may refer to using the wrong python version. In my case, my environment is Windows 10 + Cygwin. In my Windows environment variables, the PATH points to C:Python38 which is correct, but when I run my command like this:

./my_script.py

I got the ImportError: No module named numpy because the version used in this case is Cygwin’s own Python version even if PATH environment variable is correct.
All I needed was to run the script like this:

py my_script.py

And this way the problem was solved.

Answered By: Metafaniel

Try uninstalling and then reinstalling the Python extension for VSCode.

I tried many different solutions, but this "hard refresh" was the only one that worked for me.

Answered By: Ole August Støle

I did everything from the answers here but nothing worked. So I deleted all the previous installations of numpy using the commands below.

sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/numpy*
sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/python3.7/dist-packages/numpy*
sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/numpy*

Then just install using pip3.

sudo pip3 install numpy
Answered By: Noman

I just had the same problem as well! It turns out the problem happens when you’re installing Numpy to a version of python and trying to run the program using another python version. Probably the global version of Python your text editor opens by default is different from the one that you need for the version of numpy you are running.

So to start off, run:

which python
python --version
which pip
pip list

If you can find numpy on the list, its most likely the python version you are using is not compatible with the version of numpy installed. Try switching to a different version of Python in this case.

If numpy is not installed just pip install numpy or pip3 install numpy depending upon your version of python.

Answered By: Rishabh

For whom installation target is Raspberry Pi, as here they suggest:

sudo apt-get install libatlas-base-dev

could be working.

Answered By: Shivid

Run

conda update --all

PS recall calling python using either "python2" or "python3" (not merely "python").

Answered By: Itamar cohen

On MacOs, if you are getting this error in Pycharm and you installed Python3 and NumPy through Homebrew, the python interpreter path is probably not pointing to the Python interpreter that is installed by Homebrew. In Pycharm, go to Preferences>Project: [Project Name]>Python Interpreter, and enter /opt/homebrew/bin/python3 for the path to python interpreter.

Answered By: Farid Rahmani