W. eWatson wrote:
It's been awhile since I've used python, and I recall there is a way to find the version number from the IDLE command line prompt. dir, help, __version.__?

I made the most minimal change to a program, and it works for me, but not my partner. He gets

Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Documents and Settings\HP_Administrator.DavesDesktop\Desktop\NC-FireballReport20100729.py", line 40, in <module>
    from scipy import stats as stats # scoreatpercentile
File "C:\Python25\lib\site-packages\scipy\stats\__init__.py", line 7, in <module>
    from stats import *
File "C:\Python25\lib\site-packages\scipy\stats\stats.py", line 191, in <module>
    import scipy.special as special
File "C:\Python25\lib\site-packages\scipy\special\__init__.py", line 22, in <module>
    from numpy.testing import NumpyTest
ImportError: cannot import name NumpyTest

Here are the first few lines of code.

    import sys, os, glob
    import string
    from numpy import *
    from datetime import datetime, timedelta
    import time
    from scipy import stats as stats # scoreatpercentile

I'm pretty sure he has the same version of Python, 2.5, but perhaps not the numpy or scipy modules. I need to find out his version numbers.

Try:

    import numpy
    help(numpy.version)

BTW, on Python 2.6 I can see that there's "numpytest" but not
"NumpyTest".
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