On Sunday, October 19, 2014 8:25:53 AM UTC+5:30, Ben Finney wrote: > Chris Angelico writes:
> > Try learning Python itself, rather than playing around with extension > > packages like pytz. > To be fair, "You need to install 'pytz' to work correctly with date and > time values" is correct advice. If the OP doesn't install it early, then > works with timestamps, problems are inevitable -- at which point "oh, you > needed to do that first" will be inevitable. It's lose-lose. Yes > It's a sad fact that MS Windows has completely useless timezone support, > and this "install a third-party package" hurdle is a cost that is paid > by all people trying to set up Python on MS Windows. About MS-lacunae Ive nothing to say [Just head over to a debian list like users or vote or.. and witness the riot going on over systemd... Hard to believe all's right in Linux-land] As for this OP and similar problems -- yes python is in a peculiar position. Because of 'batteries included' beginners can do powerful stuff. However sometimes the batteries need to be supplemented. And then there's a problem -- its not clear whether - the beginner is having classic noob problems. Expert just needs to tweak a command a bit and he's sailing - the beginner is in somewhat uncharted (research-needed) land -- charting the route between mutually complementary AND competing setup tools I believe python must be some sort of record setter in this that o pip is a replacement for easy_install o you install pip with easy_install !! -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list