On Sunday, November 24, 2013, Rémi Rampin wrote:

> Hi developers,
>
> On Windows, running the django-admin.py tool is painful[1], because
> .py scripts are not "executable". You might be able to run it using
> the full path (if Python is the default handler for .py files, which
> it really shouldn't be). Most probably you'll need to copy it to your
> project directory and prefix it with "python " each time.


There are a few things I do whenever I install python on windows.

1) first, make sure the .py extension is associated with python.exe.
2) add the python directory to my path.
3) add the scripts directory to my path.

Then, when any packages install scripts (like django-admin.py), they ‘just
work’.

If you have multiple versions on python installed, then you can copy
python.exe to pythonX.X.exe and make sure the defult version (the version
associated with .py) is listed first on your path. The order of dirs on
your path in key here, but you can list all the versions on your path. Then
you can just type `python3.3` for example, and you'll get that version just
like on unix systems.

Of course, on unix based systems we all use virtualenv. There are a few
windows virtualenv clones implemented for windows either as batch scripts
or powershell scripts. You might want to look into those. Although, I
haven't used them myself, so I can't speak to their completeness,
reliability or usefulness. I always have git installed which comes with
mssys and gives me a bash shell on windows - the best solution IMO
(although virtualenv can be a little janky).

Of course, this has entered django-users territory. And additional
discussion about how to work around windows limitations should probably be
discussed there. My point is that with a correctly configured system, this
is not a problem on windows at all.

If there are any changes to make to Django, perhaps the install docs could
suggest the additions to the path I mention about as specific to installing
on windows.


-- 
Waylan Limberg

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