"Sara Johnson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote > I use an SSH editor set up by my school. If I type python at the > prompt in SSH, > I get the Python shell. My problem is, I can't open a GUI no matter > what > I subscribe to or purchase.
OK, Personally I'd forget about a GUI, its not that big a win for Python IMHO. What I'd do instead is open two SSH sessions, in one of them I'd open a vim session (or emacs if you prefer) to edit my code. In the second window open a python interactive session for testing stuff. You can also use Unix job control to background this session if you need to test the scripts, or you can open a third SSH session with a Unix shell prompt. In practice that's how I do nearly all my serious Python programming on Windows - using 3 separate windows: vim, Pyhon and shell. Try ideas out in the Python session, copy those ideas into the editor and save the file and then run the code in the shell window. Repeat as needed. > I have Python 2.3 and yes, I can access the commandline, but that > does > not work the way it's been described to work. What is missing? It should work like any standard >>> prompt. However it will be the vanilla version without some of the nice extras that IDE shells often provide and depending on how your Python was built it may not offer GNU readline capability to recall previous commands etc. Finally, If you really want to run an X GUI I'd recommend getting cygwin. Its big but it includes a near complete Unix/ X environment for your PC (including the fonts) as well as an SSH client and provi8ded your SSH server allows X to run - and many don't for security reasons - then it should work. You will have to issue the xhosts incantations of course to tell the server to accept requests from your PC. Pesonally I think its more work than is worth it unless you will be doing a lot of work on that server over a long time.. My opinion for what its worth! :-) -- Alan Gauld Author of the Learn to Program web site http://www.freenetpages.co.uk/hp/alan.gauld _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor