​​
On Mon, Jan 2, 2017 at 7:49 PM, Ross Burnett <rostb...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I unzipped LeoAppFolder and executed LeoApp and it did start up Leo, but
> it did not create a Leo icon on the desktop or in Start, and there is no
> launchLeo included in the package.
>

​So what?
​


> I also can't find python.exe in the package, so it's using the python i
> already had installed?
>

​The package contains python27.dll and many other .dll and .pyd files.​


Did you mean to point to a different link?
>

​No.  I meant what I said. leo.exe is, indeed, a stand-alone version of
Leo. Nothing else is required. You can create a link to it and put it on
the desktop.

Having said this, I don't recommend the stand-alone version of Leo.
Downloading Anaconda is easier in the long run.  A gazillion scientists use
Anaconda as the base of IPython.  Anaconda gives you pip, and once you have
pip installing other packages is a snap. And once you pip install git,
keeping Leo up-to-date with git pull is also a snap.

In short, focusing on one-step installation is counter-productive in the
long run. Anaconda, pip and git are tools worth a little work to get.

EKR

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