On Thu, 28 Feb 2008 23:42:49 +0000 (UTC) Medhat Gayed <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > lxml is good but not written in python and difficult to install and didn't > work > on MacOS X.
lxml is built on top of libxml2/libxslt, which are bundled with most Unix-like OS's (including Mac OS X), or available in their package systems. Trying to install it from the repository is a PITA, because it uses both the easyinstall and Pyrex (later Cython) packages - which aren't bundled with anything. On the other hand, if it's in the package system (I no longer have macports installed anywhere, but believe it was there at one time), that solves all those problems. I believe they've excised the easyinstall source dependencies, though. Using lxml on OS X Tiger was problematical, because the versions of python, libxml2 and libxslt provided with Tiger were pretty much all older than lxml supported; I built python from macports, including current versions of libxml2, libxslt and lxml, and everything worked with no problems. (I later stopped working with this on the Mac because I need cx_Oracle as well, which doesn't exist for intel macs). On Leopard, Python is up to date, but libxml/libxslt seems a bit behind for lxml 2.0.x (no schematron support being the obvious problem). I went back to the 1.3.6 source tarball (which is what I'm using everywhere anyway), and "python setup.py install" worked like a charm. (So it looks the easyinstall dependency is gone). Of course, the real issue here is that, while Python may come with "batteries included" you only get the common sizes like A, C and D. If you need a B cell, you're on your own. In XML land, validation is one such case. Me, I'd like complete xpath support, and xslt as well. But this happens with other subsystems, like doing client-side SSL support, but not server-side (at least, not as of 2.4; I haven't checked 2.5). If you just want an xml module in the standard library that's more complete, I'd vote for the source distribution of lxml, as that's C + Python and built on top of commonly available libraries. The real issue would be making current lxml work with the "outdated" versions of those libraries found in current OS distributions. <mike -- Mike Meyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://www.mired.org/consulting.html Independent Network/Unix/Perforce consultant, email for more information. _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com