On Jan 6, 4:53 pm, <trzewic...@trzewiczek.info> wrote: > Hi everyone, > > I posted that question on a python-forum, but got answer, so I ask here. > > I'm working on an artistic project and I'm looking for the best > cross-platform GUI solution. The problem is that it's gonna be a tool that > will have to be double-click installable/runnable and pre-installation of > any libraries for end-users is very much like an evil. It really has to be > double-click tool > > My first thought was PyQt, because it's a real framework with a lot of > stuff inside (including Phonon) and I know some cross-platform media > software written in C++ QT (like VLC). But on the other hand I've heard > that it's not that easy to make it "double-clicky" multi-platform. Is that > true? > > Another thing that matters for me is ease of integration with libraries > like OpenCV. > > I will be VERY thankful for any help. I'm SO tired googling the problem > (it's like weeks now!!) > > Best from Poland, > trzewiczek
I don't know this for sure, but I would be surprised if any of the widget toolkits gave you much more trouble than any other when making your app into a bundled executable. I have made wxPython apps into a Windows .exe file easily using GUI2Exe, which is an excellent GUI interface (written in wxPython by Andrea Gavana) to a number of the executable bundlers: py2exe, PyInstaller, py2app, cx_Freeze, bbFreeze. Some of these are for Windows, some for Mac, some for Linux. wxPython apparently works with OpenCV: http://opencv.willowgarage.com/wiki/wxpython While you're Googling you might want to be aware of any legal concerns with py2exe and distributing dll files (if there are any). -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list