Du you use program in linux? I work in windows, but I think it's a way to tell your program the module path like this:
 
 char path[MAX_PATH], cpy_cmd[MAX_PATH];
 GetCurrentDirectory( MAX_PATH, path );
 sprintf( cpy_cmd, "sys.path.append(r\'%s\\modules\')", path );
    PyRun_SimpleString("import sys");                // load built-in module sys
    PyRun_SimpleString( cpy_cmd );  // set my modules path
 
"stefan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hi Folks,
>
> I currenty extended some of my C++ functionality to python and also
> embedded python to use python functionality in my C++ system (and use
> as well these extended functions).
>
> While this works fine with the core python functionality, as soon as I
> run a script (on the embedded system) which tries to import modules
> which are not in the core system, like "xml" or "re", it fails and says
> it cannot find the related  dll (for example in the case of re the
> _sre.pyd). It works fine if i run the script with the 'regular'
> interpreter.
>
> It does not look like a path-problem to me, so I'm clueless right now.
> I could work around this extending some functions to python and use
> them, but then I lose what I was aiming for, the "power" of python and
> python-modules.
>
> Do i have to tell the embedded python system somehow where to look for
> extension dll's? (it even does not work if i have the pyd files in the
> (same) folder than the system where I start my embedded python program.
>
> It would be great if someone would have an idea, at least how to get me
> started on this.
>
> thanks a lot in advance,
> -stefan
>
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