Trent Nelson <tr...@trent.me> wrote:

> Conda is well suited to this.  I use it to bundle all sorts of stuff on 
> Windows.

Thanks, Trent.  That looks possible.  Though the documentation is a bit
crufty; "source activate foo" doesn't do much on my Mac, because
"activate" isn't a script in the current directory.

Bill

> (You write recipes (see https://github.com/conda/conda-recipes for examples), 
> then 'conda build' them, which produces a package that can be subsequently 
> installed with conda install.  Can sign up to anaconda.org and then upload 
> the package into your own channel, such that a plain 'conda install -c 
> janssen foobar' will install your package and all the deps (which were 
> specified in the recipe/meta.yaml).
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
> > On Dec 16, 2015, at 13:00, Bill Janssen <jans...@parc.com> wrote:
> > 
> > I'd like to build a Python-based deliverable for Windows.  It includes
> > many gnarly packages, like numpy, scipy, statsmodel, ggplot, kivy, ZODB,
> > ZEO, etc.  They include Cython modules (and scipy may even require
> > Fortran, for all I know).
> > 
> > On OS X, I build this all from source by starting with Kivy, which is
> > packaged as a venv inside an OS X application, and add in the other
> > stuff.  But I'm not sure this is the best way to proceed on Windows (7,
> > 8, and 10).  I'm also used to using mingw on Windows, but again, I'm
> > not sure that's appropriate.
> > 
> > Any advice would be appreciated...
> > 
> > Bill
> > _______________________________________________
> > python-win32 mailing list
> > python-win32@python.org
> > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-win32
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