En Sun, 19 Jun 2011 12:35:38 -0300, <pyt...@bdurham.com> escribió:
The version info comes from the DLL - I wonder if the DLL being found
is somehow old?
Make sure:
>>> import sys
>>> win32api.GetModuleFileName(sys.dllhandle)
Is the DLL you expect.
After uninstalling and reinstalling for the current user only (vs. all
users), Python now reports the correct version number.
And running your code above confirms that the proper DLL is being loaded
(c:\Python27\Python27.dll).
My original version of Python 2.7.0 was installed for all users and when
I ran the 2.7.2 MSI I chose to install for all users as well.
After running the 2.7.2 MSI, my Python exe's had the correct timestamps,
but I failed to check the python27.dll timestamp to see if this file was
out-of-date.
I wonder if changing my install method to current user forced the
installation of the updated python27.dll? And perhaps the default 2.7.2
installation in all users mode (when one is updating an existing 2.7
installation) doesn't update the Python27.dll under some conditions?
In a "for all users" install, python27.dll goes into c:\windows\system32,
not c:\python27
Maybe you installed 2.7.0 twice, "for all users" and also "for current
user only", and both in the same directory (c:\python27). That could
explain the old .dll in the install directory; the new one goes into
system32, but the old one takes precedence.
--
Gabriel Genellina
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