In article <[email protected]>, Michael Droettboom <[email protected]> wrote:
> On behalf of a veritable army of super coders, I'm pleased to announce > the release of matplotlib 1.3.0. > > > Downloads > > Downloads are available here: > > <http://matplotlib.org/downloads.html>http://matplotlib.org/downloads.html > > as well as through |pip|. Check with your distro for when matplotlib > 1.3.0 will become packaged for your environment. > > (Note: Mac .dmg installers are still forthcoming due to some issues with > the new installation approach.) > > > Important known issues > > matplotlib no longer ships with its Python dependencies, including > dateutil, pytz, pyparsing and six. When installing from source or |pip|, > |pip| will install these for you automatically. When installing from > packages (on Linux distributions, MacPorts, homebrew etc.) these > dependencies should also be handled automatically. The Windows binary > installers do not include or install these dependencies. An unofficial Mac binary is available from here: <http://www.astro.washington.edu/users/rowen/python/> Known issues: - This may break existing installations of pytz and python-dateutil (especially if those were installed by the matplotlib 1.2.1 Mac binary installer). For safety, reinstall those after installing matplotlib. - Like the Windows binaries, it does not include pytz, python-dateutil, six or pyparsing. You will have to install those manually (e.g. with pip or easy_install). - Much of the test code is missing, for unknown reasons. Thus I was not able to run most of its unit tests. So...use at your own risk. At this point I have no idea if or when there will be an official Mac binary installer. I'm afraid I don't have time to track down the issues right now. -- Russell _______________________________________________ NumPy-Discussion mailing list [email protected] http://mail.scipy.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion
