Dick Moores wrote:
On Mon, Jul 27, 2009 at 04:27, Gregor Lingl<gregor.li...@aon.at> wrote:
Dick Moores schrieb:
I've taken a long break from Python, and now I want to try scripting
with 2.62. I downloaded and installed 2.62, changed Win XP
environmental variables to use Python26. Entering python at the
command line shows I'm using 2.62:

C:\Documents and Settings\Riley>python
Python 2.6.2 (r262:71605, Apr 14 2009, 22:40:02) [MSC v.1500 32 bit
(Intel)] on win32
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.

So I'm able to try out the new features of 2.6 (I had been using
2.51), but I can't get IDLE to use 2.6. When I click on
E:\Python26\Lib\idlelib\idle.pyw, I get an IDLE instance that says:
Python 2.5.1 (r251:54863, Apr 18 2007, 08:51:08) [MSC v.1310 32 bit
(Intel)] on win32
Type "copyright", "credits" or "license()" for more information.

And of course, the new 2.6 features don't work.

Advice, please.

I suggest you have to change the association of *.pyw files to the
program, which is used to 'open' it.

In Windows explorer choose menu extras/directory options,
then choose tab file types and select PYW type
then press button 'advacned...' or somethng like this at the bottom
of the tab, chose 'open' and the button to change this.

If you see the entry

"C:\Python25\pythonw.exe" "%1" %*

change this to Python26

Yes! After I did that, now when I call
E:\Python26\Lib\idlelib\idle.pyw the IDLE that opens uses 2.62.

But I also want to use Ulipad, actually my main Python editor. When I
call E:\Programs\Ulipad3.7\UliPad.pyw (by clicking on it in Explorer),
Ulipad no longer opens. Before I made the change you suggested, at
least Ulipad would open using 2.51. What can I do to use both IDLE and
Ulipad with 2.62?

Dick


I don't know IDLE, so I don't really know how it decides which Python to use. In this thread Gregor suggested fixing the file association, which is certainly reasonable. And I suggested what to me is an easier way to fix associations. But there may be another way that I just don't know about, such as some environment variable. You could send email to idle-...@python.org. One other thought: Idle.bat is located in the install directory of python. So perhaps it locates the python that it's running with. Could you try running it more explicitly? Make your own bat file that instead of
   start idle.pyw %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9
looks like
   e:
   cd \Python26\Lib\idlelib\
   ..\..\pythonw.exe idle.pyw %*


I do know that when you double-click on a xxx.pyw file in Explorer, it will use the association to decide which program, and there's only one program you can have there. My preference is to have it execute the program, not start IDLE, a text editor, or any IDE. You may feel differently, but if you agree with me, then you might want to add UliPad.exe in the context menu of explorer. If you do that successfully, then when you right-click on a .pyw file, one of your choices will be "Run Ulipad."

The following is pretty-much pasted from some notes I took quite a while ago, and may not be quite right. So if you're not pretty familiar with the registry, you probably shouldn't experiment just based on this.

>>>In the Windows registry, add a new key under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\Directory\shell
>>>Make its default value the item text you want in the context menu.
>>>Add a new key under it, "command", and make its default value the command line you want to execute. Will look like this:
>>>"complete path to ulipad.exe"  %1 %*
>>>See http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd807139(VS.85).aspx for more details

In addition to adding it to right-click menu, you could also add it to the "open-with" list, or to "Send-To" list. I don't have any cookbook for any of these, but I've done each at one time or another.

DaveA
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