I've just moved all my stuff from a Intel Imac on 10.4.11 to a Macpro
on 10.5.2. On both machines I have the same universal activestate
python (both 2.5.1 and 2.5.2.2 give the same problem). I have some
codes in fortran from which I build a shared library using f2py from
numpy. Now when I i
At 10:53 +0100 2008/04/05, Matthias Baas wrote:
>Just for the record, the distutils have a function that returns the include
>path:
> >>>import distutils.sysconfig
> >>>distutils.sysconfig.get_python_inc()
>
>So if you really need to know the include path for some reason, you should us
Copying repsonse to the list so others can see the follow-up:
Arne Babenhauserheide wrote:
El Tuesday, 13 de May de 2008 20:46:46 Kevin Walzer escribió:
If all you are distributing are Python scripts, you can already to this
with distutils or setuptools.
I'd do it, if most Mac Users where com
El Wednesday, 14 de May de 2008 19:57:29 Kevin Walzer escribió:
> Copying repsonse to the list so others can see the follow-up:
sorry...
> Arne Babenhauserheide wrote:
> > Wouldn't it be possible to just include a binary Mac Python and then copy
> > the script to the correct location?
>
> No, no
Arne Babenhauserheide wrote:
El Wednesday, 14 de May de 2008 19:57:29 Kevin Walzer escribió:
Copying repsonse to the list so others can see the follow-up:
sorry...
Arne Babenhauserheide wrote:
Wouldn't it be possible to just include a binary Mac Python and then copy
the script to the corre
If you're using Xcode, you just #include in your
source file, then add the Python framework to your project (in Xcode,
right click on your project file in the "Groups & Files" pane, select
"Add->Existing Frameworks..."). You might need to configure the build
rules to make sure the right v
On May 14, 2008, at 2:43 PM, Michael VanLandingham wrote:
gcc on the command line or makefile, then you need to add the right
flags so that it can find the framework
The Python framework that ships with OS X is already in the search
path, so all you'd need is
-framework Python
added t
El Wednesday, 14 de May de 2008 22:00:10 Kevin Walzer escribió:
> Most likely, no. py2app works all kinds of magic in creating an
> application bundle, including rolling in the Python standard library,
> whatever GUI tookit you are using, and other scripts, and it runs
> Mac-specific tools to modif