Last March there was a discussion[1] that generated a fair amount of
interest, about creating a Framework build of Python. As far as I can
tell nothing ever came of it but I wanted to check and see if anyone
has done any work towards this goal.
The reason I ask is because I'm trying to
On 3/7/07, Peter O'Gorman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mar 7, 2007, at 3:55 PM, Blair Zajac wrote:
Peter O'Gorman wrote:
On Mar 6, 2007, at 8:58 AM, Blair Zajac wrote:
1) Would the Python maintainers be willing to take patches for a
framework install?
I'd make a new package and ensure
On Mar 7, 2007, at 11:04 PM, Charles Lepple wrote:
On 3/7/07, Peter O'Gorman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mar 7, 2007, at 3:55 PM, Blair Zajac wrote:
Peter O'Gorman wrote:
On Mar 6, 2007, at 8:58 AM, Blair Zajac wrote:
1) Would the Python maintainers be willing to take patches for a
Peter O'Gorman wrote:
On Mar 7, 2007, at 3:55 PM, Blair Zajac wrote:
Peter O'Gorman wrote:
On Mar 6, 2007, at 8:58 AM, Blair Zajac wrote:
1) Would the Python maintainers be willing to take patches for a
framework install?
I'd make a new package and ensure that it does not have any
Blair Zajac wrote:
We have a large number of PyQt apps on Linux for a special effect
studio. We use PyQt apps to manage a large render farm for special
effects, examining artwork, playing back renders at high resolutions,
and other apps for lighting and compositing, etc.
More of our
On 7 Mar 2007, at 16:33, Jeff Whitaker wrote:
Blair: Speaking as the fink python maintainer, ff the fink python
package could be converted to a framework install without too much
breakage, I'm all for that. I haven't thought about all the
issues, but
I think it's worth exploring.
I am
Peter O'Gorman wrote:
On Mar 6, 2007, at 8:58 AM, Blair Zajac wrote:
We have a large number of PyQt apps on Linux for a special effect
studio. We use PyQt apps to manage a large render farm for special
effects, examining artwork, playing back renders at high resolutions,
and other apps