I had a similar project. I had a .bat file on a network share which installed python & pywin32 from Windows installers on the share. On each workstAtion, the user would click an icon which ran a console mode .py script which copied the .py files from the share if needed, then forked a .pyw of the application. My worst problem was making sure that users actually exited the application occasionally to get the updates.
On Dec 18, 2010 3:26 PM, "Paul Koning" <[email protected]> wrote: I would recommend py2exe. That does a nice job dealing with packaging everything up, and you can take that exe file and its associated other files and wrap a conventional Windows-style installer around it. paul On Dec 18, 2010, at 5:16 PM, Ian wrote: > Hi all, > > Question 1/ > > I am writing a large and complex app in Python 2.7 with PyQt4 for an... _______________________________________________ python-win32 mailing list [email protected] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-win32 _______________________________________________ python-win32 mailing list [email protected] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-win32
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