Lion comes with an easy_install for each of its Python implementations: /usr/bin/easy_install-2.7
for /usr/bin/python2.7
, and likewise for 2.6 and 2.5.
However, scipy requires a Fortran compiler, and Lion doesn't come with one of those. It also looks like you have to have the Fortran compiler in place before installing numpy, or scipy can't be installed later.
First, you need the Xcode Command Line Tools. (Apple frequently changes the name of this package—it may be "Unix Development Tools", or "CLI Development Toolchain", etc., depending on your Xcode version.)
These can be installed by Xcode itself. If you're using 4.3.x, after installing Xcode from the App Store, launch it, go to Preferences, Downloads, Components, and click the Install button next to "Command Line Tools". For different versions, or if you want to install them without Xcode, the Homebrew page (see below) explains how to get them, or you can look around Apple's developer site.
If you've already got a package manager (Homebrew, MacPorts, or Fink), use that. If you don't, install Homebrew:
curl https://raw.github.com/gist/323731/25f99360c7de3f72027d8fd07cb369b1c8756ea6/install_homebrew.rb -o /tmp/install_homebrew.rb
ruby /tmp/install_homebrew.rb
rehash
Then install gfortran like this:
brew install gfortran
Now you're ready to install numpy and scipy. If you prefer pip to easy_install (if you don't know, you probably prefer pip), you have to install that first:
sudo easy_install-2.6 pip
Then use it to install the packages:
sudo pip-2.6 install numpy
Depending on your exact OS version and other details, you may already have a built-in numpy for 2.6, but that numpy doesn't have Fortran support. You can tell this because sudo pip-2.6 install numpy
says Requirement already satisfied (use --upgrade to upgrade): numpy in /System/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/Extras/lib/python
. The solution is to do exactly what the error message says:
sudo pip-2.6 install --upgrade numpy
And finally:
sudo pip-2.6 install scipy