2Good4You-Veki(Cro) wrote: > Hi all, > > When I want setup my script: > > I write: > > from distutils.core import setup > setup(name="myscript", > version='1.0', > scripts=["myscripts.py"]) > > or some else example,error is > > > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "<pyshell#5>", line 1, in -toplevel-
Do you get the same result if you put those Python statements in a file (typically named setup.py) and run it in the Windows "Command Prompt" window as shown in the manual: http://docs.python.org/inst/standard-install.html instead of using pyshell? Where/how are you supplying the "install" argument when using pyshell? > setup(name="myscript", > version='1.0', > scripts=["myscripts.py"]) > File "C:\Python24\distutils\core.py", line 101, in setup My distutils is where I'd expect it to be (C:\Python24\Lib\distutils) because that's where the standard Python installation puts it relative to my choice of the Python installation directory (C:\Python24). How did yours end up like that? Did you download distutils and install it as a separate package? If so, how did you install it? What version of Python are you using? > _setup_distribution = dist = klass(attrs) > File "C:\Python24\distutils\dist.py", line 130, in __init__ > setattr(self, method_name, getattr(self.metadata, method_name)) > AttributeError: DistributionMetadata instance has no attribute > 'get___doc__' HTH, John -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list