Thanks, I have 2.5 now and it works great with Nose. Now for my next project, I want to embed Python and Nose in a C++ program. I know this means using the python25.dll, and I know how to setup the calls. I think though I will not be installing Python on target systems, so I don't want to rely on sys.path including "site-install". I would have a directory with appropriate python files, a subdir for nose, and keep those relative to the application dir.
For the Python interpreter, two questions: 1. What is the best way to manage the import paths? 2. How can I invoke an interactive console for this embedded python? I'd like to play with things while my app is running. ----- Original Message ---- From: Diez B. Roggisch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: python-list@python.org Sent: Thursday, November 13, 2008 2:41:03 PM Subject: Re: Installing packages Alan Baljeu schrieb: > I'm new to Python, and just downloaded Py2.6. I also want to use Nose. So I > downloaded the latest sources, but it's not at all clear what's the best way > to put this stuff into the Python package system. Nose supports > easy_install, easy_install doesn't have an installer for Windows and Py2.6, > so I think I can't use that. (It only does 2.5 and earlier. (Should I go to > Py2.5? Is there more support out there for that?)). 2.6 is most probably a bit to fresh. I'd go for 2.5. __________________________________________________________________ Ask a question on any topic and get answers from real people. Go to Yahoo! Answers and share what you know at http://ca.answers.yahoo.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list