476

I would like to install scipy-0.15.1-cp33-none-win_amd64.whl that I have saved to the local drive. I am using:

pip 6.0.8 from C:\Python27\Lib\site-packages
python 2.7.9 (default, Dec 10 2014, 12:28:03) [MSC v.1500 64 bit (AMD64)]

When I run:

pip install scipy-0.15.1-cp33-none-win_amd64.whl

I get the following error:

scipy-0.15.1-cp33-none-win_amd64.whl is not a supported wheel on this platform

What is the problem?

2
  • 1
    Another trap: you may have to use pip3 install ... if, e.g., pip points to a separate Python2.7 installation on your system. Commented May 17, 2024 at 13:51
  • Check out this solution, it's worked for me: stackoverflow.com/a/67970307/10326392 Commented May 21, 2024 at 9:33

31 Answers 31

560

cp33 means CPython 3.3.

You need scipy‑0.15.1‑cp27‑none‑win_amd64.whl instead.

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10 Comments

I had this issue too (with numpy though) so I downloaded all of the cp27 here and tried each one until one worked perfectly (in my case numpy-1.9.3+vanilla-cp27-none-win32)
had same issue for opencv, I have python 3.5. So download cp35 and pip install filename.whl
start Python and run: import platform and then platform.architecture() to see which version of Python you're running so you know which .whl to download!
Thanks @gregorio099. I'm running a 64-bit version of Windows, but apparently a 32-bit version of Python. Your comment saved me some time.
Also, if you have multiple versions of python installed, you may also get this error. In my case, I wanted to install scipy into the 2.7 version, so on the cmd line, I explicitly called the version of python I wanted up upgrade (and install the wheel file for). For example: C:\Python27amd67\python -m pip install scipy-1.0.b1-cp27-cp27m-win_amd64.whl.
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289

This can also be caused by using an out-of-date pip with a recent wheel file.

I was very confused, because I was installing numpy-1.10.4+mkl-cp27-cp27m-win_amd64.whl (from here), and it is definitely the correct version for my Python installation (Windows 64-bit Python 2.7.11). I got the "not supported wheel on this platform" error.

Upgrading pip with python -m pip install --upgrade pip solved it.

9 Comments

Thank you! I was getting this message after installing Python 3.4 from the MSI installer. Turned out the installer included PIP 1.5.6, which was generating the "not supported" message. After upgrading, I ended up with PIP 8.1.1, which solved the problem.
Yeah, the default with a fresh Python installation seems to usually be old. Same with a new virtualenv, which installs its own pip.
Upgrading to pip 9.0.1 from a previous version(8.1.1 for Py3 and 7.0.1 for Py2) solved the issue for me
On windows the command should be py -m pip install --upgrade pip
@Freeze It might depend on the version and installation. On my Windows machine, python is Python 2.7 and py is 3.5.
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109

I had the same problem while installing scipy-0.17.0-cp35-none-win_amd64.whl and my Python version was 3.5. It returned the same error message:

scipy-0.17.0-cp35-none-win_amd64.whl is not a supported wheel on this platform.

I realized that amd64 is not about my Windows, but about the Python version. Actually I am using a 32-bit Python on a 64-bit Windows. Installing the following file solved the issue:

scipy-0.17.0-cp35-none-win32.whl

3 Comments

I think I am having the same issue. how did you check that your python was 32bit?
@user1757654, please check: stackoverflow.com/questions/1405913/…
Thank you very much for this valuable information. amd64 is indeed not about the windows version but the python's.
42

Change the filename to scipy-0.15.1-cp33-none-any.whl and then run this command:

pip install scipy-0.15.1-cp33-none-any.whl

It should work :-)

3 Comments

Just a workaround, or do you have any supporting reason?
This worked for me, but you should note that you are just lying to pip by doing this and this may broke.
Yes,this works for me.I use python -m pip debug --verbose to detect which wheel my pip support,in the return list cp39-none-any mentioned.I guess -none-any not means *,that means anything.Also I meet this problem in my virtual env's pip.Do hope my reply can help someone.
30

I come across this problem because of a wrong name of my package (scipy-0.17.0-cp27-none-win_amd64 (1)).

After I deleted the '(1)' and changed the package to scipy-0.17.0-cp27-none-win_amd64, the problem got resolved.

3 Comments

Thanks so much! I couldn't believe my eyes that pip judges which platform the wheel pertains to by name!
You saved my day, I can't believe pip depends on name of file
I had this issue as well, with a numpy wheel - I had replaced a + with a - when I uploaded it to our nexus repository. Changing the name back before pip install fixed it - Thanks!
19

If you are totally new to Python, read step by step or go directly to 5th step directly.

Follow the below method to install SciPy 0.18.1 on Windows 64-bit, Python 64-bit.

Be careful with the versions of

  1. Python

  2. Windows

  3. .whl version of NumPy and SciPy files

  4. First install NumPy and then SciPy.

     pip install FileName.whl
    
  5. For NumPy: http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/#numpy For SciPy: http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/#scipy

Be aware of the file name (what I mean is check the "cp" number). Example: scipy-0.18.1-cp35-cp35m-win_amd64.whl

To check which "cp" number is supported by your pip. Go to point number 2 below.

If you are using .whl file, the following errors are likely to occur.

  1. You are using pip version 7.1.0, however version 8.1.2 is available.

You should consider upgrading via the 'python -m pip install --upgrade pip' command

  1. scipy-0.15.1-cp33-none-win_amd64.whl.whl is not supported wheel on this platform

For the above error: start Python (in my case 3.5), and type:

import pip print(pip.pep425tags.get_supported())

Output:

[('cp35', 'cp35m', 'win_amd64'), ('cp35', 'none', 'win_amd64'), ('py3', 'none', 'win_amd64'), ('cp35', 'none', 'any'), ('cp3', 'none', 'any'), ('py35', 'none', 'any'), ('py3', 'none', 'any'), ('py34', 'none', 'any'), ('py33', 'none', 'any'), ('py32', 'none', 'any'), ('py31', 'none', 'any'), ('py30', 'none', 'any')]

In the output you will observe "cp35" is there, so download "cp35" for NumPy as well as SciPy.

2 Comments

Apparently, on some platforms, you need import pip._internal followed by print(pip._internal.pep425tags.get_supported())
Neither pip.pep425tags.get_supported() nor pip._internal.pep425tags.get_supported() is recognized on my system (Windows 10, pip version 20.0.2)
13

Please do notice that all platform requirements *are taken from the name of the .whl file!

So be very careful with renaming of *.whl package. I occasionally renamed my newly compiled TensorFlow package from

tensorflow-1.11.0-cp36-cp36m-linux_x86_64.whl

to

tensorflow-1.11.0-cp36-cp36m-linux_x86_64_gpu.whl

just to remind myself about GPU support and struggled with

tensorflow-1.11.0-cp36-cp36m-linux_x86_64_gpu.whl is not a supported wheel on this platform.

error for about half an hour.

1 Comment

This actually saved my life !! Thanks a ton !! With this same package actually :)
11

First of all, cp33 means that it is to be used when you have Python 3.3 running on your system. So if you have Python 2.7 on your system, try installing the cp27 version.

Installing scipy-0.18.1-cp27-cp27m-win_amd64.whl, needs a Python 2.7 running and a 64-bit system.

If you are still getting an error saying "scipy-0.18.1-cp27-cp27m-win_amd64.whl is not a supported wheel on this platform", then go for the win32 version. By this I mean install scipy-0.18.1-cp27-cp27m-win32.whl instead of the first one. This is because you might be running a 32-bit python on a 64-bit system. The last step successfully installed scipy for me.

1 Comment

"cp" for "CPython"?
11

cpXX indicates the Python version.

Whichever Python X.X version you have installed into your system, download that particular cpxx file.

For example, if you have installed Python version 3.7 then install packagename-packageversion-cp37-cp37m-osx_10_13_x86_64.whl

Comments

7

For my case, with a dlib installation into my Python installation (Python 3.6.9), I have found that changing the WHL file name from dlib-19.8.1-cp36-cp36m-win_amd64.whl to dlib-19.8.1-cp36-none-any.whl works for me.

Here is the way I run pip install to install dlib:

pip3 install dlib-19.8.1-cp36-none-any.whl

However, I still wonder whether there are any alternatives to installation of a WHL file by the pip command without changing the name.

Comments

6

Things to check:

  1. You are downloading proper version like cp27 (means for Python 2.7) cp310 (means for Python 3.10).

  2. Check of which architecture (32 bit or 64 bit) your Python is (you can do it so by opening Python IDLE and typing).

     import platform
     platform.architecture()
    

    Now download the file of that bit/architecture, irrespective of your system architecture.

  3. Check whether you're using the correct filename (i.e., it should not be appended with (1) which might happen if you download the file twice)

  4. Check if your pip is updated or not. If not, you can use:

    python -m pip install --upgrade pip

1 Comment

On step 2 you can rather ask pip for "compatible tags" instead, using python -m pip debug --verbose, which will list the filename suffixes it's happy to accept.
3

I tried to install scikit-image, but I got the following error when I tried to install the .whl file, even though my installed version of Python was 2.7 32-bit:

scikit_image-0.12.3-cp27-cp27m-win32.whl is not a supported wheel on this platform.

However, I also got this message before the error message:

You are using pip version 7.1.0, however version 8.1.2 is available.
You should consider upgrading via the 'python -m pip install --upgrade pip' command.

I then ran the command python -m pip install --upgrade pip and then pip install scikit_image-0.12.3-cp27-cp27m-win32.whl worked fine.

Comments

3

I'm deploying Flask using Python 3.4 on IIS.

The following steps worked for me:

  1. Upgrade pip
  2. Install the wheel file for NumPy
  3. pip install pandas

Comments

3

It's better to check the version of Python where you want to install your package.

If the wheel was built for Python 3 and your Python version is Python 2.x you may get this error.

While installing using pip, follow this convention:

python2 -m pip install XXXXXX.whl # If the .whl file is for Python 2
python3 -m pip install XXXXXX.whl # If the .whl file is for Python 3

2 Comments

I run the code '!python -m pip install Twisted-17.9.0-cp36-cp36m-win_amd64.whl' but I get this error: 'Requirement 'Twisted-17.9.0-cp36-cp36m-win_amd64.whl' looks like a filename, but the file does not exist Twisted-17.9.0-cp36-cp36m-win_amd64.whl is not a supported wheel on this platform.'
I'm using windows 10 and python 3.8. Every answers not worked for me but only this answer worked. Thank you.
2

I had a similar problem, installing a 64-bit version for Python 2.7 on Windows 7 64-bit. Everything was up-to-date, yet I got the message:

scipy-0.18.1-cp27-cp27m-win_amd64.whl is not supported wheel on this platform

Then I downloaded a 32-bit .whl file and it worked.

pip install scipy-0.18.1-cp27-cp27m-win32.whl

I suspect that the problem was probably that I didn’t have an AMD processor, rather an Intel one, and the SciPy 64-bit version says amd64 at the end.

Comments

1

This error might happen because of the difference between armv7 and armv6. If you download the package for armv7 and try to install for armv6, this error occurs.

2 Comments

On what kind of system? Raspberry Pi? Android? M1? Something else?
Yes on Raspberry Pi, if we download packages for CM4 to SD card, and try to run that SD card on Pi Zero it does not work. If we download package for Pi Zero and try to work with CM4 it works.
1

For me I had similar issue. In my case, I didn't notice the python version was different (32bit vs 64bit) between the computers.

By the way, you can still do it, but you will need to manually replace all the whls files that are not recognized.

for example, for cryptography-36.0.1, from https://pypi.org/project/cryptography/36.0.1/#files use:

cryptography-36.0.1-cp36-abi3-win32.whl (32bit) vs cryptography-36.0.1-cp36-abi3-win_amd64.whl (64bit)

In addition, for some reason there were version differences between what was in the requirements.txt file, versus the whl files version in the folder. For example, I had numpy 1.22.3 in requirements file, and numpy-1.22.2-cp39-cp39-win32.whl in the folder.

So make sure they match, and adjust the requirements file accordingly

Comments

1

I had two different versions of python installed on my windows 11 machine. I was also getting this error because I was using a different version for installation than the version used for building wheel. when I used the same version, it worked immediately.

Comments

0

Try Conda for installation. It seems to resolve versions on the fly:

conda install scikit-learn

Comments

0

Simply, if you have more than one Python installation on your system, for example, 2.7/3.4/3.5, it's necessary you check your installation path. :)

Comments

0

During TensorFlow configuration I specified Python 3.6. But default, Python on my system is Python 2.7. Thus pip in my case means pip for 2.7. For me

pip3 install /tmp/tensorflow_pkg/NAME.whl

did the trick.

Comments

0

In my case (Windows 64-bit, Python 2.7, and Cygwin) the issue was with a missing gcc.

Using apt-cyg install gcc-core enabled me to then use pip2 wheel ... to install my wheels automatically.

Comments

0

I am using Python 2.7 and a Windows 64-bit system. I was getting the same error for lxml-3.8.0-cp27-cp27m-win_amd64.whl while doing pip install lxml-3.8.0-cp27-cp27m-win_amd64.whl.

Run pip install lxml and it auto-detected and successfully installed the Win32 version (though my system is Windows-64 bit)

cd C:\Python27
pip install lxml

Collecting lxml
  Downloading lxml-3.8.0-cp27-cp27m-win32.whl (2.9MB)
    100% |################################| 2.9MB 20kB/s
Installing collected packages: lxml
Successfully installed lxml-3.8.0

So, I will go with @1man's answer.

Comments

0

In my case, it had to do with not having installed the GDAL core previously. For a guide on how to install the GDAL and Basemap libraries go to GISPython

Comments

0

I tried a bunch of the stuff in previous answers to no avail.

Previously, I upgraded to pip 18.1, but I kept getting the following error when trying (for pyFltk):

>>from fltk import *

ImportError: DLL load failed %1 is not a valid Win32 Application

I was getting all sorts of errors about the *.whl file not being supported by my machine or something about being unable to remove the correct files from distutils.

I went back to my notes and they indicated that the whl file:

pyFltk-1.3.3.1-cp36-cp36m-win_amd64.whl but I kept getting the error above sooo...

it required pip 9.0.3 to install.

I downgraded my version of pip to 9.0.3:

pip install pip=9.0.3

And the .whl file installed properly.

This is also related to: here

Comments

0

I was trying to verify the installation of TensorFlow as specified here on a newly created virtual environment on Python 3.6. On running:

pip3 install --ignore-installed --upgrade "/Users/Salman/Downloads/tensorflow-1.12.0-cp37-cp37m-macosx_10_13_x86_64.whl"

I get the error and/or warning:

tensorflow-1.12.0-cp37-cp37m-macosx_10_13_x86_64.whl is not a supported wheel on this platform.

Since I had previously upgraded from pip to pip3, I simply replaced pip with pip3 as in:

pip3 install --ignore-installed --upgrade "/Users/Salman/Downloads/tensorflow-1.12.0-cp37-cp37m-macosx_10_13_x86_64.whl"

and it worked like a charm!

Comments

0

I had the same problem

I downloaded the latest pip from https://pypi.org/project/pip/#files

And then....

pip install << downloaded file location >>

And then the Pygame and Kivy installation worked...

Comments

0

For me, it worked when I selected the correct bit of my Python version, not the one of my computer version.

Mine is 32 bit, and my computer is 64 bit. That was the problem and the 32 bit version of fixed it.

To be exact, here is the one that I downloaded and worked for me:

mysqlclient-1.3.13-cp37-cp37m-win32.whl

Once again, just make sure to chose your Python version of bits and not your system one.

Comments

0

In my case I was using Linux (Docker container), and tried to install Windows whl-package.

py3-none-win_amd64.whl

This obviously doesn't work, use e.g. "any" or "linux" -version for Docker/Linux instead of "win".

Comments

0

I know it's been an old thread, but today when I tried to install mysqlclient on windows also face this issue, we all know sometimes it's a pain to install mysqlclient on windows platform, so I followed someone's suggestion to download a prebuild mysqlsqlclient wheel on pypi, then I try using following command to install the wheel:

pip install mysqlclient-2.2.4-cp310-cp310-win_amd64.whl

As the wheel shows I have python 3.10 installed, which I got it from indygreg build, but I miss downloading a x86 python distribution, which is cpython-3.10.15+20240909-i686-pc-windows-msvc-install_only.tar.gz, so when I type python in the command line, it gives

Python 3.10.15 (main, Sep 9 2024, 20:36:01) [MSC v.1929 64 bit (win32)] on win32

So if anyone face this error, try to double check your python version is correct.

Comments

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