From 95d6235fbc8f17c0339c6a40e5a38c100ce71cef Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Mark Pilgrim Date: Fri, 25 Sep 2009 23:50:23 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] remove another dangling reference --- installing-python.html | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/installing-python.html b/installing-python.html index e3ac49d..d7a4a45 100755 --- a/installing-python.html +++ b/installing-python.html @@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ h2,.i>li{clear:both}

The first thing you need to do with Python is install it. Or do you? -

If you're using an account on a hosted server, your ISP may have already installed Python 3. If you’re running Linux at home, you may already have Python 3, too. Most popular GNU/Linux distributions come with Python 2 in the default installation; a small but growing number of distributions also include Python 3. (As you’ll see in this chapter, you can have more than one version of Python installed on your computer.) Mac OS X includes a command-line version of Python 2, but as of this writing it does not include Python 3. Microsoft Windows does not come with any version of Python. But don’t despair! You can point-and-click your way through installing Python, regardless of what operating system you have. +

If you're using an account on a hosted server, your ISP may have already installed Python 3. If you’re running Linux at home, you may already have Python 3, too. Most popular GNU/Linux distributions come with Python 2 in the default installation; a small but growing number of distributions also include Python 3. Mac OS X includes a command-line version of Python 2, but as of this writing it does not include Python 3. Microsoft Windows does not come with any version of Python. But don’t despair! You can point-and-click your way through installing Python, regardless of what operating system you have.

The easiest way to check for Python 3 on your Linux or Mac OS X system is to get to a command line. On Linux, look in your Applications menu for a program called Terminal. (It may be in a submenu like Accessories or System.) On Mac OS X, there is an application called Terminal.app in your /Application/Utilities/ folder.