Sorry you're having trouble with this. Windows is always a problem child
but installing Julia on Linux should not present any major problems.


On Fri, Jan 24, 2014 at 10:08 PM, Rajn <[email protected]> wrote:

> Well actually I tried linux too. I have latest Xubuntu 13.0 version and
> Julia does not even install (worse than Windows) when I try its
> repositories suggested in the download webpage. Some issue with unmet
> dependencies with some math library.
> I guess I will stick to Octave and python for now and come back to Julia
> next year when things are a bit better resolved.
> I wish I had more time to play around but I am hard pressed for time.
>
>
>
> On Friday, January 24, 2014 7:16:41 PM UTC-5, Jake Bolewski wrote:
>>
>> Honestly after fighting with Python on Windows for many years, your best
>> course of action is probably to uninstall everything and try again from
>> scratch.  I would back Steven's suggestion to install Anaconda if you are
>> able.  It sounds like more work but in the end it is the only way to
>> preserve your sanity.
>>
>>
>> On Friday, January 24, 2014 5:36:24 PM UTC-5, Steven G. Johnson wrote:
>>>
>>> On Friday, January 24, 2014 3:59:38 PM UTC-5, Rajn wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Sorry Steve,
>>>> There is no PYTHONPATH in the Windows environment variable. I have not
>>>> set that variable. I miswrote earlier.
>>>> There is only PYTHONHOME which is set to C:\Python27
>>>>
>>>
>>> You might try setting your PYTHONPATH variable, so that libpython can
>>> use it to find the Python modules it is missing.
>>>
>>

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