On 2013-04-03, Neil Cerutti <ne...@norwich.edu> wrote: > On 2013-04-03, John Nagle <na...@animats.com> wrote: > >> I'm struggling with radio hams who are trying to get my antique >> Teletype program running. I hate having to write instructions >> like this: >> >> [...] > > Python programs can be distributed as binary-like packages, e.g., > www.py2exe.org.
I'd second the recommendation for for py2exe. It's been a couple years since I used it, but for 6-7 years before that I used it regularly to distribute about a half-dozen different wxPython apps to Windows users, and it worked very nicely. It sometimes requires some effort to get the configuration tweaked right and then adjusted so the result works on a variety of Windows versions, but in the end it always worked great. I usually used one of the various free "self-installer generators" to bundle up the .exe file(s) produced by py2exe along with whatever else was needed to go with them and make them simple to install. [I've forgotten which ones I used, but they all do basically the same thing.] I did all my development on Linux. When I boot over to Windows (on a VM, generally) I had Cygwin installed and just ran a "make" to do all the executable creation and bundling via command-line calls to py2exe and self-installer utilities. -- Grant Edwards grant.b.edwards Yow! It's a hole all the at way to downtown Burbank! gmail.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list