Hi Joe,
Consider also if you want a development environment that works on different
operating systems.
Eric runs on Linux and Windows (and probably MAC but I'm not sure). Visual
Studio will be a Windows-only environment.
A non-free IDE is http://www.activestate.com/komodo-ide .
Comparison here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Python_IDE#Python
Owen
From: Thomas Kluyver [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: April-28-13 12:03 PM
To: primary discussion list for use and development of cx_Freeze
Subject: Re: [cx-freeze-users] An opportunity: cx_Freeze in Eric IDE
Hi Joe,
You can have a go with Eric, but there isn't really one clear best solution
for Python in the same way that there is for Windows C++ programs. If you're
comfortable with Visual Studio, you might also want to look at Python Tools
for Visual Studio: http://pytools.codeplex.com/
Thomas
On 28 April 2013 16:40, MC-JA <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi all and my friend Thomas,
I am new to Python and this might be a stupid questions? Eric IDE is
Python Visual Studio? Or is there one out there that makes coding,
compiling and adding classes, DLL, modules, simple like Microsoft Visual
studio C++? I am writing a complex game in Python but having problems with
Python tools, (binding, testing, API, animation, etc.) your responses to
this question will greatly be appreciated. Thanks Joe
From: Thomas Kluyver [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, April 25, 2013 10:19 AM
To: Pietro Moras; primary discussion list for use and development of
cx_Freeze
Subject: Re: [cx-freeze-users] An opportunity: cx_Freeze in Eric IDE
On 25 April 2013 14:29, Thomas Kluyver <[email protected]> wrote:
- We're interested in improving the situation with the MSVCR, but it seemed
to be an unclear legal situation when we looked into it. I forget the
details, but it was something like only people with the paid version of
Visual Studio could officially distribute those DLLs.
"If any of these files are provided by Microsoft, check whether you are
permitted to redistribute them. To view a list of permitted files, see
Redist.txt in the ..\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\ folder on the computer
where Visual Studio is installed."
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms235299%28v=vs.100%29.aspx
There doesn't seem to be any mention of redistributing them if you don't
have visual studio installed. Presumably it just never occurred to Microsoft
that anyone would want to.
I also can't see anything with the Visual C++ Runtime redistributable
packages indicating the conditions under which you can distribute them.
Maybe there's info included in the installer itself, but I'm not running in
Windows at the moment to check.
Thomas
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