I'm trying to create a virtual environment for my current Django project using
python3 -m venv env
however the command doesn't create any directory with bin/include/lib folders. What exactly am I missing here?
I'm trying to create a virtual environment for my current Django project using
python3 -m venv env
however the command doesn't create any directory with bin/include/lib folders. What exactly am I missing here?
Sometime system's path environment is not aware of virtualenv.exe
solution:
install virtualenv  
pip install virtualenv  
run command in the directory where you want virtual environment :
python3 -m virtualenv venv 
I have a Windows 10 machine and had a same problem. It was because I had multiple versions of python. Unknowingly windows had created a python.exe in the WindowsApps folder -
Then the solution is sometimes:(there is a huge chance that, the old %PATH% got renamed)
py -m venv venv
This python.exe had a size of 0 kb, so I deleted the python.exe in the WindowsApps folder, opened a new Command prompt and it started working.
For anyone facing this issue now, simply changing the command to start python instead of python3 fixes this
why do you have to write python3 -m venv env when you base is installed as python3.6 itself? 
Just do pip install virtualenv this should install virtualenv package if not already installed, then
virtualenv envname this will run and should give you a message like this, I have created a env called testenv:
C:\Users\Admin\python_projects\venvs>virtualenv testenv
Using base prefix 'c:\\python37'
New python executable in C:\Users\Admin\python_projects\venvs\testenv\Scripts\python.exe
Installing setuptools, pip, wheel...
done.
If you get this, it is a success, else do let us know what you get, after this you must cd into the Scripts folder and then run activate
I was having this same problem. I was able to get venv working by uninstalling Python and reinstalling it (I'm using the Anaconda distribution). The py -m venv test command still doesn't have any output after running it, but now it creates a folder for me and I can activate the test environment.
Try this (works for me)
python -m venv C:\<optional-EXISTING-directory-path>\<VENV-name-u-want-2-use>
For more info: https://docs.python.org/3/library/venv.html
Install and create through:
pip install virtualenv
virtualenv <your_virtualenv_name>
Then activate the environment, by going to ./your_virtualenv_name/Scripts folder and then run:
activate
I guess I am a bit late to answer the question, but before creating a virtual environment always check if we already have a .venv hidden folder
ls -la this command will show us the hidden folders, as .venv will be hidden by default

.venv folder (name is up to us), then create one by mkdir .venv to follow the best convention, in this folder we can create multiple virtual environmentspython3 -m venv ./venv/drfdrf (Django Rest Rramework)

source .venv/drf/bin/activate by this command we are running the script which is there in bin folder

I hope I was able to explain, as I am also learning
Please feel free to edit or make any changes in the post, If something is wrong
I just had the similar problem, and I realized changing the path directories names by removing the spaces in the name of the directories helps.