On 24 Apr, 2010, at 18:19, Michael Foord wrote:
> On 18/04/2010 16:48, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
>>
>> [snip...]
>>>Michael> A build on my machine produces output similar to:
>>>
>>>Michael> Python build finished, but the necessary bits to build these
>>> modules
>>>Michael> were not
On 25 Apr, 2010, at 16:43, Michael Foord wrote:
> On 25/04/2010 15:31, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
>> On 24 Apr, 2010, at 18:19, Michael Foord wrote:
>>
>>
>>> On 18/04/2010 16:48, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
>>>
[snip...]
>Michael> A build on my machine produces output s
Mike wrote:
File "build/bdist.macosx-10.6-universal/egg/pyttsx/__init__.py", line
39, in init
this looks like you are running code out of the build dir, which may not
have anything to do with your problem, but it's odd.
How are you running this, setting your paths, etc?
-Chris
File "bui
I don't think I'm doing anything special really. Just running it with python
zgp.py. It may be something the pyttsx package is doing...
- Original Message -
From: "Chris Barker"
To:
Sent: Sunday, April 25, 2010 12:14 PM
Subject: Re: [Pythonmac-SIG] Module Import Problem
Mike wrote:
On 25/04/2010 16:57, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
On 25 Apr, 2010, at 16:43, Michael Foord wrote
On 25/04/2010 15:31, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
On 24 Apr, 2010, at 18:19, Michael Foord wrote:
On 18/04/2010 16:48, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
[snip...]
Michael> A
Mike wrote:
I don't think I'm doing anything special really. Just running it with
python zgp.py. It may be something the pyttsx package is doing...
how did you install pyttsx ?
-Chris
- Original Message - From: "Chris Barker"
To:
Sent: Sunday, April 25, 2010 12:14 PM
Subject: Re:
On 25 Apr, 2010, at 18:20, Michael Foord wrote:
>>>
>> Not that I know. The OSX installers on python.org include more C libraries,
>> but not everything. The script that creates those installers is in the
>> repository and it should be easy enough to enhance that to include more
>> libraries.
On 25/04/2010 17:28, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
On 25 Apr, 2010, at 18:20, Michael Foord wrote:
Not that I know. The OSX installers on python.org include more C libraries,
but not everything. The script that creates those installers is in the
repository and it should be easy enough
Using easy_install. I installed easy_install by using this script:
http://peak.telecommunity.com/dist/ez_setup.py
I ran that as python ez_setup.py seetuptools
Then:
easy_install pyttsx
- Original Message -
From: "Chris Barker"
To:
Sent: Sunday, April 25, 2010 12:26 PM
Subject: Re: [Py
On 25 Apr, 2010, at 18:33, Michael Foord wrote:
> On 25/04/2010 17:28, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
>> On 25 Apr, 2010, at 18:20, Michael Foord wrote:
>>
>
Not that I know. The OSX installers on python.org include more C
libraries, but not everything. The script that creates
On 25/04/2010 18:04, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
On 25 Apr, 2010, at 18:33, Michael Foord wrote:
On 25/04/2010 17:28, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
On 25 Apr, 2010, at 18:20, Michael Foord wrote:
Not that I know. The OSX installers on python.org include more C librarie
[starting a new thread]
On Sun, Apr 25, 2010, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
>
> [...] running a 10.5 VM just for doing test builds of the installer
> sucks.
Could you point at documentation on running Mac VMs? AFAICT, you can
only do that with OS X Server; if you know differently that would be a
huge
On 25/04/2010 15:31, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
On 24 Apr, 2010, at 18:19, Michael Foord wrote:
On 18/04/2010 16:48, Ronald Oussoren wrote:
[snip...]
Michael> A build on my machine produces output similar to:
Michael> Python build finished, but the necessary bits to b
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