On 18-May-05, at 11:14 AM, Bob Ippolito wrote: > On May 18, 2005, at 2:05 PM, Dethe Elza wrote:
>> I have a framework which I can't import into PyObjC in the usual >> way. Since then I've tried various other frameworks I've found on my >> system, mostly embedded in application bundles, and some import but >> others do not. I'm not getting any information on *why* they can't >> be imported, even when I turn on debugging with the following lines >> before any attempt to load bundles. > [snip] > It's more or less a case of getting what you deserve, trying to > load embedded frameworks from applications that were never meant > for external use. They probably depend on symbols defined in the > executable or something. So I finally got a response from Skype tech support: <quote> Skype.framework is currently a private framework, meaning that you should include it in your application. It should be located in @executable_path/../Frameworks ... Let us know if this solves your problem. </quote> And I've embedded the framework in my (PyObjC) application in foo.app/ Contents/Frameworks/ but it still doesn't load. Is this a case where I should build a wrapper in ObjC and then load my wrapper from PyObjC? --Dethe "Isn't 'A guy tried to smuggle plutonium from Tajikistan into Afganistan or Pakistan' just a fancy way of saying 'Live for the moment?'" --Get Your War On _______________________________________________ Pythonmac-SIG maillist - Pythonmac-SIG@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pythonmac-sig