On 20 Aug, 2008, at 5:05, Michael VanLandingham wrote:
I recently built a Python64.framework & interpreter from the 2.6
sources (using Ronald O's recently recommended build settings), and
then build PyObjC. Because I got an error running PyObjC's build
script, (setup tries to pull down
On 21 Aug, 2008, at 3:08, beau wrote:
I am using apple script to create a droplet that basically lets you
pass the incoming file as an argument to a bundled python script. The
python script then displays the output in a UI made with Tkinter.
Questions:
1. is it possible to quit the apple scrip
On 21 Aug, 2008, at 13:31, s s wrote:
On Aug 21, 2008, at 7:02 AM, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
The main problem at the moment is PyObjC: the code supports 4-way
builds (or rather, 3-way builds, libffi is broken on PPC64), but
the repository is not as stable as it should be. I want to do a
p
Hi All,
I know this comes up every few months, but there is never a definitive
answer given.
The short version is: what is the best Python to use under Leopard?
The longer version is: What is the best Python to use under leopard if:
- I want to use PyObjC
- I want to use more recent ver
Andrew Jaffe wrote:
It would also be great if there were a single place on the web where
this is answered; if you search -- even with this group -- you get very
different pieces of advice.
The reason you get different pieces of advice is because there is no one
correct answer. There are
Hi Andrew,
On Aug 21, 2008, at 9:11 AM, Andrew Jaffe wrote:
I know this comes up every few months, but there is never a
definitive answer given.
The short version is: what is the best Python to use under Leopard?
The longer version is: What is the best Python to use under leopard
if:
Hi All,
Thanks for the advice!
However, I'm pretty sure I don't need the overhead of a fink or MacPorts
install -- I've been very happy with Framwork installs so far (and I'm
pretty sure that's necessary for PyObjC).
I think the detailed questions are: is there a way to use PyObjC with
a
Andrew Jaffe gmail.com> writes:
>
> Hi All,
>
> Thanks for the advice!
>
> However, I'm pretty sure I don't need the overhead of a fink or MacPorts
> install -- I've been very happy with Framwork installs so far (and I'm
> pretty sure that's necessary for PyObjC).
>
I can vouch for the new
If you go the ports route, download and install Porticus (highly
recommended) to give you graphical management of the ports packages,
to clean, download, install, activate/deactivate, handle dependencies,
show you all variations of a particular port and just checkmark all
the optional compiles you