Sorry, I meant an installer for PySide1/2. On Wed, Oct 19, 2016 at 9:58 PM, Spencer Parkin <spencertpar...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I actually spent a full day trying to pip install pyside1 with no luck. > The pip install of pyside actually goes through a build process requiring > cmake and qmake as dependencies, and maybe openssl (I can't remember). You > need msvc compiler tools too, I think. cmake said it couldn't find > "QtCore" in a directory that, if you go and look, has QtCore4.lib, etc., > inside of it, so cmake must be crazy. There were other errors that I can't > remember...Qt-specific cmake-macros that it complained weren't defined. > Maybe I'm crazy. > > Then I spent a half day trying to get pyside2 to work. I finally got it > compiled and "installed", but then the examples didn't work. E.g., QWidget > couldn't be found inside of QtGui, which seems crazy. Not sure what went > wrong there. > > One very difficult thing about building PySide2 is that the install (which > is essentially a build process) is not incremental! So if you (and I did > this) mistype a command line arg, such as "--openssl=blah/blah", you won't > know it until an hour later. So you fix it, then have to wait another hour > to see if the fixed worked. > > Sorry, I don't mean to diss anything or anybody. I had a very difficult > time. I'm sure PyQt is awesome as is Qt once you finally have a working > installation of them. I'm a big fan of wx, personally, since I've used it > for so long and its architecture very straight-forward. I'm using Qt > because a coworker is and I'm helping him on the project. > > For the sake of idiot users such as myself, an installer for PyQt would be > a good idea. (And by that I mean something that doesn't require > configuration and compilation and linking.) > > Sorry, this went too long. > > On Wed, Oct 19, 2016 at 3:34 PM, Alexey Vihorev <viho...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Wait a sec… PyQt4 means you are fine with Qt4 and don’t need Qt5, right? >> Then you can use PySide1, it’s actually quite stable and no need to compile >> etc – just “pip install” it. PySide2 is work in progress for those who need >> Qt5 bindings. And BTW – Qt5 indeed restructured modules and classes. So >> maybe even PySide2 is actually working in your instance. >> >> >> >> *From:* PySide [mailto:pyside-bounces+vihorev=gmail....@qt-project.org] *On >> Behalf Of *Spencer Parkin >> *Sent:* Thursday, October 20, 2016 12:24 AM >> *To:* pyside@qt-project.org >> *Subject:* Re: [PySide] PySide2 installed but not working >> >> >> >> I gave up on PySide and switched to PyQt4. Works like a charm. >> >> >> >> I was able to get wxPython working in 15 minutes too, BTW. >> >> >> >> PySide1/2 needs some serious help. I'm not smart enough to get it >> installed. >> >> >> >> On Wed, Oct 19, 2016 at 2:24 PM, Spencer Parkin <spencertpar...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> >> >> I built PySide2, 32-bit from sources, but when I run the tetrix.py >> example, I get... >> >> >> >> AttributeError: module 'PySide2.QtNetwork' has no attribute 'QSslSocket'. >> >> >> >> If I comment out the call to QtNetwork.QSlSocket.suppertsSsl(), then get >> another telling error... >> >> >> >> AttributeError: module 'PySide2.QtGui' has no attribute 'QWidget'. >> >> >> >> It sounds like to me that my installation is completely wacked-up. >> Qwidget can't be found inside QtGui?! How is that even possible? >> >> >> >> It's taken me over 4 hours to get to this point. I had to re-run the >> install several times after making dependency fixes each time. Please >> don't tell me I need to re-run the install. >> >> >> >> Any help would be greatly appreciated. I'm ready to give up and just use >> wxPython...It might be more reliable. >> >> >> >> --Sp >> >> >> > >
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