Greg Ewing <greg.ew...@canterbury.ac.nz> wrote in news:49edb69f.7070...@canterbury.ac.nz:
> PyGUI 2.0.4 is available: > > http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/greg.ewing/python_gui/ > > Fixes a few more bugs and hopefully improves things > on Windows, although I can't be sure it will fix all > the Windows problems people are having, because I > haven't been able to reproduce some of them. I want PyGUI to work so badly that it just kills me to find that that's how it works for me. So badly. I've always only gotten this response when I try to run the blobedit demo: File "C:\extracted\PyGUI-2.0.4\Demos\BlobEdit\blobedit.py", line 16, in <module> from GUI import Application, ScrollableView, Document, Window, FileType, Cursor, rgb File "C:\Python25\Lib\site-packages\GUI\__init__.py", line 78, in __getattr__ traceback.print_stack() Failed to import 'Application' from Applications Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\Python25\Lib\site-packages\GUI\__init__.py", line 69, in __getattr__ module = __import__(modname, self.__dict__, locals(), [name]) ImportError: No module named Applications I really don't know what this means. Is it a path issue? There appears to be an Applications.py in GUI\Win32, with an Application class. If there is some change I can make in the code, can anyone tell me what to do? How can I fix it? The thing is, in my opinion, something like this is what Python *should* have in its standard package. That is, a PYTHON GUI, not a thin wrapper around an application-specific API. Sure, the GUI is in fact a wrapper, but it should not matter what the back end is that supports it (eventually... I know, baby steps). Obviously, I don't know from GUIs, or maybe it would be obvious to me what to do to get it working. And it is for people like me that I want to see it work. I really don't want to have to spend more than a few minutes investigating the nuances of a windowing system. I just want to be able to put up a convenient front end for a program. -- rzed -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list