I realized that my query was not making much sense, or a bit convoluted. A simler form of the question:
For packages which do contain .dlls & .pyd's (not pure Python) their latest version may be compatible with -- say Python 2.5, whereas I need the version compatible for Python2.2. Is this a completely manual exercise ? On 5/11/08, Banibrata Dutta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Thanks Gabriel & Terry. Those explanations make perfect sense. > > What is the recommended way, to find the "compatible" packages that include > .dll's / .pyd's or dependencies that are Python release specific ? For > example, is there a 'yum' or other automatic dependency checking mechanism > which works accross OS's (Windows & Linux), which will allow me to find the > other (s.a. 3rd party) packages, which would work with say Python2.2 ? Is it > a completely manual exercise, where I read the README or Package Notes or > Release Notes, and figure out the required version of package ? > > > On 5/11/08, Gabriel Genellina <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> En Sat, 10 May 2008 01:38:24 -0300, Banibrata Dutta < >> [EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió: >> >> > given that I already have Python2.5 installed & will install Python2.4, >> will >> > copying the ../Lib/site-packages/ from 2.5 into 2.4's, work ? >> > i think the answer is "no", but still asking. is it package specific ? >> > >> > does it matter if the packages were egg drops ? >> >> Packages containing only .py modules ("pure" packages) are OK; packages >> using C extensions (.dll, .pyd) have to be rebuilt (or you have to download >> the binaries for the other Python version). >> >> -- >> Gabriel Genellina >> >> -- >> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >> > > > > -- > regards, > Banibrata > http://www.linkedin.com/in/bdutta > http://octapod.wordpress.com > -- regards, Banibrata http://www.linkedin.com/in/bdutta http://octapod.wordpress.com
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