On 27 Feb, 01:40, Steve Holden <st...@holdenweb.com> wrote: > Chris Rebert wrote: > > On Thu, Feb 26, 2009 at 2:23 PM, Gary Schells <gsche...@hotmail.com> wrote: > >> Hello, > >> Python newbie here. I am working with Python and geoprocessing in ArcGIS. > >> I'm taking a training course online and the exercise I'm working on makes > >> mention of using PythonWin instead of Idle. > > >> I am using version 2.5 and have not been able to locate PythonWin. The > >> download just includes Idle for the environment. Can anyone point me in > >> the > >> right direction to download the PythonWin piece of this puzzle? > > > Seems to be included inhttp://sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/ > > And it's well worth getting, since it's the recommended programming > environment for ArcGIS. IIRC it uses the COM server capabilities to > achieve some of the required magic.
It's the recommended programming environment in ESRI's geoprocessing classes. The only stuff that is specific to PythonWin is the debugging, (which you can do in IDLE too, just in a slightly different way). Personally I do most of my python hacking in emacs, both when my code calls arcgisscripting and otherwise. Sometimes I use IDLE, since in emacs (and PythonWin) I miss the ability to restart the interpreter process to get a clean environment. There is one thing I use the pywin32 library for, and that is a little hack to get around the issue that each version of ArcGIS is bound to a specific python version: try: import arcgisscripting except ImportError: import win32com.client class arcgisscripting(object): @staticmethod def create(): return win32com.client.Dispatch ('esriGeoprocessing.GpDispatch.1') With this little code snippet in a utility module, I can use python 2.6 with ArcGIS, and I can test my scritps with python 2.4, to ensure that they run in ArcGIS 9.2 environments. /Niklas Norrthon -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list