On Apr 13, 10:42 pm, Lawrence D'Oliveiro <l...@geek- central.gen.new_zealand> wrote: > In message <kz4xn.868$i8....@news.indigo.ie>, Luis Quesada wrote: > > > I am getting an "expected string without null bytes" error when using > > cxfreeze for creating a standalone application (in Linux-Ubuntu). > > Why bother? Every decent Linux system will have Python available. Why not > just distribute it as a script?
I keep hearing this reply every time I ask this question, and it doesn't seem to make sense to me. Anything other than a trivial script will have dependencies. These might be other Python packages, C-extensions, and other libraries. What if your program runs on a version of Python other than the one installed on the client's Linux system? In my opinion, there is a severe need for this question to be answered in a robust and simple way. Is creating an rpm / deb file the answer? I don't know, but I think it's a very valid question. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list