Bonjour Sylvain, > I'm curious, why don't you port your application ?
Well, not sure I get your question, but here's the context. I develop a manufacturing system for a customer. This *must* run on Windows (I'd love the to use Linux but well, I'm sure you're aware of the linux-on-the-desktop story :-) ). I develop most of the time on Windows but being an idealist, I'd like two things : - I'd like my software to run on Linux (which it does, provided some careful handling of portability issues; thansk to PySide/python, etc this is quite easy). - I'd like to develop my software on Linux (even if its end target is Windows). Now, you could say that since the target is windows, it's safer/more economical to do the actual testing on Windows. In practice, I spent 95% of my time in that situation. However, there's something practical here. My application is a typical fat client/server one. It is deployed at my customer's premise which is behind a firewall. Since I work 100km away from him, we have established a secure connection between the server and me. That server runs linux. From time to time I want to check that the fat-client behaves correctly once run in the customer's network. So what I do is that I deploy my fat-client over the server and test it there. Since the server is the only machine I have access to and it runs linux, my fat-client must run on Linux as well if I want to be able to do my tests. You see ? Stefan > > > 2013/11/7 S. Champailler <[email protected] > <mailto:[email protected]> > > > > Hello, > > > > Not a bug this time... This mail just to tell you that I've been able to > > run my > > PySide-heavy application with Wine on Debian. > > And in non trivial way. > > > > 1. So I've my python 2.7/sqlalchemy/PySide application. > > 2. I make a nice distributable *.exe version out of it with PyInstaller > > 3. Then I run the exe with Wine (the latest one) > > 4. yes! it works > > > > My use case is that I want to test my release procedure for windows. And > > since > > I'm a Debian fan, well, although I produce Windows executables, I still > > want to > > test under Linux :-) > > > > Next step is to actually run PyInstaller under Wine. This way I will be > > able to > > stay in Linux 100% of the time. > > > > Thus one more good point for PySide :-) > > > > stF > > > > _______________________________________________ > > PySide mailing list > > [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > > http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/pyside > > <http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/pyside> > > > > > > -- > Sylvain Meunier > mgdesign > _______________________________________________ PySide mailing list [email protected] http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/pyside
