Re: SuSe 10.0 missing Idle
Joseph Garvin wrote: SuSE probably has a seperate package, something like python-tk, that will install IDLE. # rpm -qf `which idle` python-idle-2.4.1-3 Ciao, Michael. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
SuSe 10.0 missing Idle
Hello, Hopefully this is not to of topic. I just installed SuSe 10.0 and although python installed but no Idle. I can't seem to find it in the list of available packages either. I was wondering if someone might steer me in the right direction. I've just started learning python and would really like to get Idle back or failing that a reccommendation of another IDE for python? Thanks in Advance Steve -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: SuSe 10.0 missing Idle
Steve wrote: Hello, Hopefully this is not to of topic. I just installed SuSe 10.0 and although python installed but no Idle. I can't seem to find it in the list of available packages either. I was wondering if someone might steer me in the right direction. I've just started learning python and would really like to get Idle back or failing that a reccommendation of another IDE for python? Thanks in Advance Steve SuSE probably has a seperate package, something like python-tk, that will install IDLE. Look for that, some distros don't like to install idle by default because it also means installing the Tk toolkit that it uses. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: SuSe 10.0 missing Idle
Joseph Garvin wrote: Steve wrote: Hello, Hopefully this is not to of topic. I just installed SuSe 10.0 and although python installed but no Idle. I can't seem to find it in the list of available packages either. I was wondering if someone might steer me in the right direction. I've just started learning python and would really like to get Idle back or failing that a reccommendation of another IDE for python? Thanks in Advance Steve SuSE probably has a seperate package, something like python-tk, that will install IDLE. Look for that, some distros don't like to install idle by default because it also means installing the Tk toolkit that it uses. Thanks, I'll give that a try Steve -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list