On 13/01/2015 07:05, cjgoh...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Monday, January 12, 2015 at 10:09:03 PM UTC-8, Tim Golden wrote:
>> On 12/01/2015 23:12, Andrew Koenig wrote:
>>> Fixed it!
>>>
>>> The aforementioned article is correct. I downloaded the RegDelNull
>>> program mentioned in the article
>>> (http:/
On Monday, January 12, 2015 at 10:09:03 PM UTC-8, Tim Golden wrote:
> On 12/01/2015 23:12, Andrew Koenig wrote:
> > Fixed it!
> >
> > The aforementioned article is correct. I downloaded the RegDelNull
> > program mentioned in the article
> > (http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb897448
On 12/01/2015 23:12, Andrew Koenig wrote:
Fixed it!
The aforementioned article is correct. I downloaded the RegDelNull
program mentioned in the article
(http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb897448.aspx) and
ran it on hkcr, hkcu, hklm, hku, and hkcc (short for
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT, HKEY
Fixed it!
The aforementioned article is correct. I downloaded the RegDelNull program
mentioned in the article
(http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb897448.aspx) and ran it on
hkcr, hkcu, hklm, hku, and hkcc (short for HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT,
HKEY_CURRENT_USER, HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, HKEY_
Not sure that would be a good idea: There are 22 such keys, as opposed to only
two keys with Windows ID strings that don't end in nulls. I found this article:
http://www.swarley.me.uk/blog/2014/04/23/python-pip-and-windows-registry-corruption/
with the comment "If you are happy to completely rem
On 12/01/2015 21:45, Andrew Koenig wrote:
It runs and creates a classes.txt file with 803 lines. The first few:
-> '$cpfile12'
-> '$crfile12'
-> '$cxfile12'
-> '*'
-> '.$cp'
-> '.$cr'
-> '.$cx'
-> '.386'
-> '.3ds'
A few lines in the middle that might be relevant:
-> '.py'
-> '.pyc
It runs and creates a classes.txt file with 803 lines. The first few:
-> '$cpfile12'
-> '$crfile12'
-> '$cxfile12'
-> '*'
-> '.$cp'
-> '.$cr'
-> '.$cx'
-> '.386'
-> '.3ds'
A few lines in the middle that might be relevant:
-> '.py'
-> '.pyc'
-> '.pyo'
-> '.pys'
-> '.pyw'
And the la
python --version reports 3.4.2, which is what I expected. I see no PYTHONPATH
variable, or any environment variable with a name beginning PY (either upper or
lower case).
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On 12/01/2015 18:02, Andrew Koenig wrote:
Downloaded and installed 64-bit Python 3.4 and pywin32-219. Both installed
smoothly on my 64-bit Win7 machine. I added C:\Python34 to the search path.
If I launch a Windows command window and run
python -m ensurepip
I get the following:
Ig
On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 5:02 AM, Andrew Koenig wrote:
> Downloaded and installed 64-bit Python 3.4 and pywin32-219. Both installed
> smoothly on my 64-bit Win7 machine. I added C:\Python34 to the search path.
>
> If I launch a Windows command window and run
>
> python -m ensurepip
Do you
Downloaded and installed 64-bit Python 3.4 and pywin32-219. Both installed
smoothly on my 64-bit Win7 machine. I added C:\Python34 to the search path.
If I launch a Windows command window and run
python -m ensurepip
I get the following:
Ignoring indexes: https://pypi.python.org/simple/
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