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authorBerker Peksag <berker.peksag@gmail.com>2016-03-07 16:50:49 (GMT)
committerBerker Peksag <berker.peksag@gmail.com>2016-03-07 16:50:49 (GMT)
commit777d639a923786c8ea3c527e29fcba00e764c054 (patch)
tree0b794741cc26a5735d3ce44e5bcd00223dfdedeb
parente525ee3b483889313b62b09b4c9103d18dd9cbb7 (diff)
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Issue #21034: Remove outdated paragraph from venv documentation
Since Python 3.4, there is no need to install pip and setuptools into a venv manually.
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/venv.rst5
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/library/venv.rst b/Doc/library/venv.rst
index e9ede8b..acd1443 100644
--- a/Doc/library/venv.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/venv.rst
@@ -43,11 +43,6 @@ Creating virtual environments
Common installation tools such as ``Setuptools`` and ``pip`` work as
expected with venvs - i.e. when a venv is active, they install Python
packages into the venv without needing to be told to do so explicitly.
- Of course, you need to install them into the venv first: this could be
- done by running ``ez_setup.py`` with the venv activated,
- followed by running ``easy_install pip``. Alternatively, you could download
- the source tarballs and run ``python setup.py install`` after unpacking,
- with the venv activated.
When a venv is active (i.e. the venv's Python interpreter is running), the
attributes :attr:`sys.prefix` and :attr:`sys.exec_prefix` point to the base