Just for curiosity: what advantages has pyGTK over pyQt? I have some
experience on pyQt, so maybe i could help with that too.

On 11 mar, 01:44, Volker Braun <vbraun.n...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Shipping the .net / mono runtime adds about the same order of magnitude as
> PyGTK, QT+Python bindings, or Java JRE for that matter. A drop in the
> bucket compared to the Sage install that it is supposed to manage. And IHMO
> the question is not how to save a few megabytes of disk space, but how to
> design an app that fits into the skillset that Sage developers have. And
> for that I think PyGTK is the best choice.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sunday, March 10, 2013 2:35:28 PM UTC-4, mmarco wrote:
>
> > I am not sure pyGTK (or pyQT, or any other python bindings) is the way
> > to go. As you said, it would require to install pyGTK, but also GTK
> > itself and python. I think that is overkill. I think that a windows
> > native program, or maybe something writen in the .NET framework
> > (making sure that it also works on mono, if we want to also ship it in
> > other platforms) would be a much better fit.
>
> > On 8 mar, 22:10, Volker Braun <vbraun.n...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > A GUI would be useful, I think. I'd use PyGTK, which gives a nice
> > "native"
> > > look on Windows yet is totally platform agnostic. And, being Python,
> > fits
> > > nicely into the skillset that we can expect from a Sage developer.
>
> > > The only minor drawback is that you need PyGTK libraries, which is
> > trivial
> > > on Linux but of course Microsoft doesn't ship with it (really ships with
> > > nothing of value, but thats another story). In any case it is possible
> > to
> > > pack the Windows archive with a copy of the relevant dlls which still
> > > requires a lot less disk space (<100MB) than any Sage install.
>
> > > I could mentor a student for a PyGTK project.
>
> > > On Friday, March 8, 2013 12:27:07 AM UTC-10, P Purkayastha wrote:
>
> > > > On 03/08/2013 05:43 PM, mmarco wrote:
> > > > > IIRC, the call for projects of Google summer of code was last year
> > > > > around march or april. Should we start to get prepared for this?
>
> > > > > As a suggestion for possible projects, i would propose the writing
> > of
> > > > > a windows GUI program that handles the virtual machines (set them up
> > > > > properly, handles upgradings, checks the availability of ports and
> > > > > decides if the VM should be launched in headless mode...)
>
> > > > > It sounds like a project that can be done in a summer, and can be
> > > > > really useful to spread sage among windows users.
>
> > > > This is too little I think. The following can be added to it
>
> > > > 1. Fix the Mac application. See
> > > >http://ask.sagemath.org/question/2322/trouble-logging-into-notebook
> > > > for what currently happens on a Mac
>
> > > > 2. Open sage to the worksheet when double clicking on sws files. This
> > is
> > > > already mostly done for Mac, and should be done for Linux too :)

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