To install conda, you must first pick the right installer for you. The following are the most popular installers currently available:
Miniconda is a minimal installer provided by Anaconda. Use this installer if you want to install most packages yourself.
Anaconda Distribution is a full featured installer that comes with a suite of packages for data science, as well as Anaconda Navigator, a GUI application for working with conda environments.
Miniforge is an installer maintained by the conda-forge community that comes preconfigured for use with the conda-forge channel. To learn more about conda-forge, visit their website.
A supported operating systems: Windows, macOS, or Linux
For Miniconda or Miniforge: 400 MB disk space
For Anaconda: Minimum 3 GB disk space to download and install
For Windows: Windows 8.1 or newer for Python 3.9
Tip
You do not need administrative or root permissions to install conda if you select a user-writable install location (e.g. /Users/my-username/conda
or C:\Users\my-username\conda
).
Follow the instructions for your operating system:
Installing in silent mode#You can use silent installation of Miniconda, Anaconda, or Miniforge for deployment or testing or building services, such as GitHub Actions.
Follow the silent-mode instructions for your operating system:
Cryptographic hash verification#SHA-256 checksums are available for Miniconda and Anaconda Distribution. We do not recommend using MD5 verification as SHA-256 is more secure.
Download the installer file and, before installing, verify it as follows:
Windows:
If you have PowerShell V4 or later:
Open a PowerShell console and verify the file as follows:
Get-FileHash filename -Algorithm SHA256
If you don't have PowerShell V4 or later:
Use the free online verifier tool on the Microsoft website.
Download the file and extract it.
Open a Command Prompt window.
Navigate to the file.
Run the following command:
Start-PsFCIV -Path C:\path\to\file.ext -HashAlgorithm SHA256 -Online
macOS: In iTerm or a terminal window enter shasum -a 256 filename
.
Linux: In a terminal window enter sha256sum filename
.
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