Hint: C:\>unzip -v \effbot.org\downloads\PIL-1.1.5.win32-py2.5.exe Archive: /effbot.org/downloads/PIL-1.1.5.win32-py2.5.exe warning [/effbot.org/downloads/PIL-1.1.5.win32-py2.5.exe]: 62010 extra bytes at beginning or within zipfile (attempting to process anyway) Length Method Size Ratio Date Time CRC-32 Name -------- ------ ------- ----- ---- ---- ------ ---- 5 Defl:N 7 -40% 06-04-24 14:17 34d6cc96 PLATLIB/PIL.pth 12658 Defl:N 3006 76% 05-04-06 10:13 3b4dbaad PLATLIB/PIL/ArgImagePlugin.py 3470 Defl:N 1362 61% 05-04-06 10:13 94cb46df PLATLIB/PIL/BdfFontFile.py 6914 Defl:N 2182 68% 05-04-06 10:13 c2710661 PLATLIB/PIL/BmpImag
(etc) This is true for all package installers built w. distutils. (You can either use your favourite command-line unzip utility, or even write a simple installation script using Python's zipfile module). </F> 2009/1/30 charlie <cjl...@gmail.com>: > Is there any way to run the PIL installer from the command line on > Windows in 'silent' mode, without displaying the install screens or > requiring any user interaction? > > I figured out how to do this with MSIs (the Python installer) and with > installers created with Inno setup (use innounp), but can't quite figure out > how to do this with the PIL installer, or if it is even possible. > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Image-SIG maillist - Image-SIG@python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/image-sig > > _______________________________________________ Image-SIG maillist - Image-SIG@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/image-sig