I should also note, for anyone working on the pymel project, that
"maintainence" is actually spelled "maintenance"
wow, that's embarrassing. 4 years of liberal arts college down the
drain :) glad we beta tested!
-chad
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 10:25 AM, Ian Jones <[email protected]>
wrote:
Yes. Though it won't be installed via easy_install. Only a manual one.
You can download pymel and just copy the maintainence module into your
path to create them with:
import maintainence
maintainence.stubs.pymelstubs(extension='pi')
Ian
I can also post
2010/1/5 Miguel González Viñé <[email protected]>:
> Hi Chad, is it included in beta2? I can't find the script. Is there
> another beta released?
> Thanks!
>
>
> On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 5:45 AM, Chad Dombrova <[email protected]>
wrote:
>> a script is included with the development version of pymel 1.0
for creating reliable pi files for both maya and pymel packages.
>>
>>
>> On Jan 4, 2010, at 11:08 PM, ryant wrote:
>>
>>> I am looking into how to generate the pi files that Wing needs for
>>> auto completion. I am unsure how to use the generate_pi.py file
that
>>> comes with Wing to do this. The files I need to convert I
believe are
>>> the ones at this path:
>>>
>>> C:\Program Files\Autodesk\Maya2010\Python\lib\site-packages\maya\
>>>
>>> If I want to generate the maya.cmds pi file where is the .pyc
file for
>>> maya.cmds?
>>>
>>> When I use the generate_pi.py file it doesnt generate anything
useful.
>>> Using the command prompt I type this in:
>>>
>>> C:\Program Files\Autodesk\Maya2010\Python\lib\site-packages\maya>
>>> python "C:\Program Files\Wing IDE 3.2\src\wingutils
\generate_pi.py"
>>> OpenMaya.pyc OpenMaya.pi
>>>
>>> This then results in the following in the Command Prompt:
>>>
>>> Traceback (most recent call last):
>>> File "C:\Program Files\Wing IDE 3.2\src\wingutils
\generate_pi.py",
>>> line 1028,
>>> in <module>
>>> ProcessModule(modname, magic_code, metadata, file=f)
>>> File "C:\Program Files\Wing IDE 3.2\src\wingutils
\generate_pi.py",
>>> line 819, i
>>> n ProcessModule
>>> exec('import %s' % mod_name, namespace)
>>> File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
>>> ImportError: Bad magic number in .\OpenMaya.pyc
>>>
>>> It does generate a OpenMaya.pi file which is completely empty.
>>>
>>> Can someone point me in the right direction of how to generate
the pi
>>> files needed for Wing properly?
>>>
>>> Ryan
>>> Character TD
>>> www.rtrowbridge.com/blog
>>> NaughtyDog Inc.
>>>
>>> --
>>> http://groups.google.com/group/python_inside_maya
>>
>> --
>> http://groups.google.com/group/python_inside_maya
>
> --
> http://groups.google.com/group/python_inside_maya
>
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