On Nov 20, 2007 8:12 AM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Nov 19, 3:49 pm, Larry Bates <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > > Is there a way to create a .dll from a python program which includes > > > the python runtime? > > > > > I'm building a Windows application (C# VisualStudio2005) and I'd like > > > to utilize some of the functionality available in a Python module. For > > > my users who install my Windows application, I'd prefer that they not > > > have to install the entirety of Python on their machines. > > > > > Thanks much, > > > D > > > > Turn the Python program into a COM object instead. Then it can be > > dispatched by > > any programming language and distributed after bundling with py2exe. > > > > -Larry > > OK, I'm a newbie and not sure how to create/call COM objects. This is > probably not a question for a python newsgroup, but what the heck: How > do you turn a python program into a COM object? And, what does it mean > to be "dispatched"? >
You're getting in far above your head - these are advanced concepts and require a fairly detailed low level knowledge of .NET, Python, and COM. Firstly, you should be aware that doing this will still require your users to "install all of Python" on their machine, or at least a large subset, because you'll need a good portion of the standard library to do anything useful. You should look at the python for .NET project and IronPython, depending on your needs. Python for .NET is a .NET <-> CPython bridge, which will allow you to create and drive a CPython interpreter from .NET. This instance of Python will be able to use regular CPython extension modules, as well as (through the bridge) call back up into .NET code. It requires a working CPython installation. IronPython is a pure .NET implementation of Python, and will allow you have a Python interpreter that can load .NET assemblies, but it won't be able to load Python C modules. It requires installation like all .NET libraries do, but no CPython installation - it's a separate implementation of Python. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list