Try this at a Python prompt:

>>> from pkg_resources import parse_version
>>> parse_version('1.1alpha2')
('00000001', '00000001', '*alpha', '00000002', '*final')
>>>

On Apr 3, 8:46 pm, jotham <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I think you miss the point.  pyglet.version is not a numeric
> indicator.  It's a string.  One version I am using states
> '1.1alpha2'.  This can never be suitably converted to integer parts. I
> was specifically suggesting a tuple, hence the code I wrote (After
> being lambasted on here before for not providing code).
>
> On Apr 3, 9:34 pm, "Txema Vicente" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > Try pyglet.version
>
> > This works for me:
>
> > from pyglet import version
> > print version
>
>
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