On Oct 5, 11:29 am, Robert Kern <robert.k...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 2009-10-05 12:42 PM, Buck wrote: > > > > >> With the package layout, you would just do: > > >> from parrot.sleeping import sleeping_in_a_bed > >> from parrot.feeding.eating import eat_cracker > > >> This is really much more straightforward than you are making it out to be. > > > As in the OP, I need things to "Just Work" without installation > > requirements. > > The reason for this is that I'm in a large corporate environment > > servicing many groups with their own custom environments. > > The more ad hoc hacks you use rather than the standard approaches, the harder > it > is going to be for you to support those custom environments.
I too would prefer a standard approach but there doesn't seem to be an acceptable one. > I do believe that you and Stef are exceptions. The vast majority of Python > users > seem to be able to grasp packages well enough. You're failing to differentiate between python programmer and a system's users. I understand packages well enough, but I need to reduce the users' requirements down to simply running a command. I don't see a way to do that as of now without a large amount of boilerplate code in every script. I've considered installing the thing to the PYTHONPATH as most people suggest, but this has two drawbacks: * Extremely hard to push thru my IT department. Possibly impossible. * Local checkouts of scripts use the main installation, rather than the local, possibly revised package code. This necessitates the boilerplate that installation to the PYTHONPATH was supposed to avoid. * We can work around the previous point by requiring a user-owned dev installation of Python, but this raises the bar to entry past most of my co-developers threshold. They are more comfortable with tcsh and perl... I think the issue here is that the current python-package system works well enough for the core python devs but leaves normal python developers without much options beyond "all scripts in one directory" or "tons of boilerplate everywhere". -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list