On Wednesday, April 8, 2020 at 10:47:42 AM UTC-7, John Ladasky wrote: > Hi folks, > > Something broke in my Python installation in the past two or three days. I'm > working in Ubuntu 19.10 and Python 3.7, without virtual environments. > > I have two modules of Python source code that I am developing. I regularly > change this code and "distribute" it to myself using setuptools. From the > command prompt in the module's base folder, I execute: > > python3 setup.py sdist > sudo python3 setup.py install > > That process has been working for me for years. But after recent rebuilds, > when I try to import those modules today, I get ModuleNotFoundErrors for each > of them. I tried importing other modules that were installed by pip3. They > work fine. > > I looked in /usr/local/lib/python3.7/dist-packages. The one thing that is > unique to my two packages is the .egg extension at the end of the file names. > Oddly, one of the two modules is a single .egg archive file, and the other > is a normal folder with folders inside it, despite the .egg extension in the > name. > > A third package of mine which I did not build recently appears as a normal > sub-folder within dist-packages, and it imports correctly. > > What is setuptools supposed to do? Why has its behavior apparently changed? > Hope someone can offer some advice. Thanks.
Followup observation: One of the two Python packages I'm building using setuptools depends on argparse 1.4. The default version of argparse in my Python 3.7 distro is 1.1. I watched setuptools fetch argparse 1.4 from the Net when I built it. When I start my Python interpreter and import argparse, I get version 1.1. I found an argparse 1.4 sub-folder in my site-packages folder. It was built yesterday. It has a .egg extension, just like my two modules that won't import. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list