On Tue, Nov 15, 2011 at 12:19 PM, Wayne Watson <sierra_mtnv...@sbcglobal.net > wrote:
> > For py, I found \Python25\Lib\idlelib\idle.**pyw. >>> >>> Does no good to specify yet another .py file as the executable. You >> must specify a .EXE file (or .BAT, or .CMD, or very rarely, a .COM file). >> > In py land I only have py, pyc, pyw, and pyo. I've now done py and pyc as > default. Still have the same Win32 app problem. > What am I supposed to do with python.exe? It will open a DOS window with a > command >>> prompt. I can use the prompt to do arithmetic. > > Tried idle.bat moments ago. Still get Win32 app problem msg on py files. I'm going to try one last time before I give up: - Go to Control Panel\Programs\Default Programs\Set Associations. - Highlight the line for ".py" - Click "Change program..." - In the "Open with" dialog, click the "Browse..." button. - In the "Open with..." dialog, navigate to C:\Python25\Lib\idlelib - Highlight "idle.bat" - Click the "Open" button. - You'll be back in the "Open with" dialog. Click OK. If you - yet again - do something other than what I've just described, and then reply telling me that it didn't work, I will add you to my spam filter. You asked about the %1 %2 %3 etc. in idle.bat. Yes, those are arguments. >From now on, when you double-click on a .py file, - Windows will run idle.bat and pass it the name of your .py file as its first (and only) argument. - Idle.bat will then run pythonw.exe with "idle.pyw" as its first argument, and the name of your .py file as its second argument. - Python will then run IDLE with your .py file as its first argument. I'm going to underscore this one more time, because you need to understand it: Python is an interpreted/scripting language, and (except for specialty extensions like Pyrex) it does NOT compile into standalone executables.* Windows cannot run Python code directly - Windows doesn't know what Python is. When you double-click on a Python file and expect Windows to do something with it, you have to tell Windows to open it with a program that Windows actually CAN run directly - in this case, idle.bat. What you've been telling Windows to do, by associating .py files with idle.pyw, is to open one file it doesn't recognize by using another file it doesn't recognize. Don't do that. * Installation bundlers like Py2EXE or GUI2EXE simply create a minimal bundle of the Python interpreter and put it in (essentially) a self-extracting Zip file. Yes, the result is an executable - usually a gigantic one - but it's not "compiling" in the usually-understood meaning of the word.
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