No, it bundles a python binary along with your source in a .app package.
Regards,
Kenneth Miller
On Jan 19, 2008, at 4:55 PM, Charles Hartman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
Thank you very much. Doesn't that depend on whatever Python is built-
in on the end-user's machine? I'd have to do some testing (which I
may not have properly equipped machines to do) to see what my app
will work with . . .
Best,
Charles Hartman
On Jan 19, 2008, at 4:20 PM, Kenneth Miller wrote:
Check out py2applet, I use it all the time.
Regards,
Kenneth Miller
On Jan 19, 2008 1:40 PM, Charles Hartman < [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
I mean *really* simple: I've been away from Python programming for a
couple of years, and I've just gotten a query about an old open-
source
program posted on my website. I may have a fix for the problem the
user encountered, at least when I run from inside the Wing IDE.
My question is, what is the current best/simplest way to build a
freestanding application? I tried "python setup.py" with my old
setup.py file, but I get an error: setuptools not found. Maybe I just
need to fix my path? It's been a couple of systems (a couple of
computers, for that matter) since I did this, and though I've kept up
with current versions of Python (2.5), Wing, and wxPython (2.8.x),
I've probably neglected some basic housekeeping.
Pointers to a simple how-to-build-an-app doc would be welcome. Thanks
for any help.
Charles Hartman
_______________________________________________
Pythonmac-SIG maillist - Pythonmac-SIG@python.org
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pythonmac-sig
_______________________________________________
Pythonmac-SIG maillist - Pythonmac-SIG@python.org
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pythonmac-sig