Mitchell Model <m...@acm.org> added the comment: At 10:56 PM +0000 02/12/09, Ned Deily wrote: >Ned Deily <n...@acm.org> added the comment: > >FWIW, I am not able to reproduce this using a release3.0 IDLE (so with >today's patches) built with the default Apple-supplied Tcl/Tk in 10.5. >Are you using a newer Tcl/Tk? Does it happen if you move your current >preferences out of ~/.idlerc? >
It does still happen if I move my preferences. And move my .Idle.py. I did build it with a newer Tk -- 8.5 installed as a Framework. (And I switched the order of /System/Library/Frameworks and /Library/Frameworks, which makes more sense. I thought I had seen that as an Issue, but it must have been just a web page where I saw it. Similarly, I added /opt/local/lib and /opt/local/include in detect_modules before the directories that are added, so that it finds the readline I installed with "port".) So, I started again with a fresh checkout. I didn't switch the order of the Frameworks directories, and I tried it with and without the directories for readline. I started Python manually, imported Tk, checked it's version, etc. to confirm I was getting the Apple installation. If I try to run bin/idle from the 3.1 Frameworks version directory I get a segmentation fault. I've seen a lot of weird behavior over the years in my many configuration and installation escapades across a wide variety of software, but I've never seen a seg fault with anything to do with Python. I have the "do you want to report this" backtrace if you're interested. A little later I'll try this from scratch on a clean, though PowerPC (G4), machine and see what happens. _______________________________________ Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org> <http://bugs.python.org/issue5232> _______________________________________ _______________________________________________ Python-bugs-list mailing list Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-bugs-list/archive%40mail-archive.com