\i0 variant.) If you are running on macOS 10.9 or later and if you have no need for compatibility with older systems, use the 10.9 variant. Use the 10.6 variant if you are running on macOS 10.6 through 10.8 or if you want to produce standalone applications that can run on systems from 10.6. The Pythons installed by these installers are built with private copies of some third-party libraries not included with or newer than those in macOS itself. The list of these libraries varies by installer variant and is included at the end of the License.rtf file.
This variant of Python 3.7 includes its own private copy of OpenSSL 1.1.0. The deprecated Apple-supplied OpenSSL libraries are no longer used. This means that the trust certificates in system and user keychains managed by the
\f0 to install a curated bundle of default root certificates from the third-party
\f1 certifi
\f0 package ({\field{\*\fldinst{HYPERLINK "https://pypi.python.org/pypi/certifi"}}{\fldrslt https://pypi.python.org/pypi/certifi}}). If you choose to use
\f0 , you should consider subscribing to the{\field{\*\fldinst{HYPERLINK "https://certifi.io/en/latest/"}}{\fldrslt project's email update service}} to be notified when the certificate bundle is updated.\
Both installer variants come with their own private version of Tcl/Tk 8.6. They no longer use system-supplied or third-party supplied versions of Tcl/Tk.\
Python.org Python $VERSION and 2.7.x versions can both be installed on your system and will not conflict. Command names for Python 3 contain a 3 in them,
\f1 python3
\f0 (or
\f1 python$VERSION
\f0 ),
\f1 idle3
\f0 (or i
\f1 dle$VERSION
\f0 ),
\f1 pip3
\f0 (or
\f1 pip$VERSION
\f0 ), etc. Python 2.7 command names contain a 2 or no digit: