This is my current work-around ## Seems to be a required hack for pythonnet if 'pythonnet' in sys.executable: try: import site site.addsitedir(r'C:\Python27\lib\site-packages') except: print sys.path
On Fri, Aug 23, 2013 at 12:51 PM, John Burkhart <jfburkhart....@gmail.com>wrote: > Hello, > > I have a pythonnet installation that works fine for the most part. > However, whenever I try to import a module that was built with > easy_install, I have to explicitly add the full egg path to the sys.path > variable. Does pythonnet not respect the easy-install.pth file? > > [code] > >>> import south > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> > ImportError: No module named south > >>> import sys > >>> sys.path.append(r'C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\south-0.8.2-py2.7.egg') > >>> import south > >>> > >>> import openpyxl > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> > ImportError: No module named openpyxl > >>> > sys.path.append(r'C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\openpyxl-1.6.1-py2.7.egg') > >>> import openpyxl > >>> > [/code] > > > My easy-install.pth file contains: > > [code] > import sys; sys.__plen = len(sys.path) > ./python_distutils_extra-2.37-py2.7.egg > ./openpyxl-1.6.1-py2.7.egg > ./south-0.8.2-py2.7.egg > import sys; new=sys.path[sys.__plen:]; del sys.path[sys.__plen:]; > p=getattr(sys,'__egginsert',0); sys.path[p:p]=new; sys.__egginsert = > p+len(new) > [/code] >
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