On 14 Oct, 19:19, John Velman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks to all. I'll look into wx before I get too much further.
- For prebuilt binaries of the Python framework and various third-
party packages, including wxPython, see:
http://www.pythonmac.org/packages/py25-fat/index.html
(Note that
On Oct 13, 7:21 pm, John Velman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm considering moving from Linux to imac. I've recently returned to
> Python (was never very expert) to develop a small gui application. At
> present I plan to use PyGTK with Pango and Cairo.
You should be aware that unless something
On Oct 13, 2007, at 8:23 PM, Adam Atlas wrote:
> On Oct 13, 7:21 pm, John Velman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I'm considering moving from Linux to imac. I've recently
>> returned to
>> Python (was never very expert) to develop a small gui
>> application. At
>> present I plan to use PyGTK
Thanks to all. I'll look into wx before I get too much further.
John V.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Raffaele Salmaso <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Alex Martelli wrote:
> > I use Mac OSX 10.4 and this assertion seems unfounded -- I can't see any
> > wx as part of the stock Python (2.3.5). Maybe you mean something else?
> Very old version, see
> /System/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions
Alex Martelli wrote:
> I use Mac OSX 10.4 and this assertion seems unfounded -- I can't see any
> wx as part of the stock Python (2.3.5). Maybe you mean something else?
Very old version, see
/System/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.3/Extras/lib/python/wx-2.5.3-mac-unicode
--
http://
Alex Martelli wrote:
> James Stroud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>...
>> For OS X 10.4, wx has come as part of the stock python install. You may
>
> I use Mac OSX 10.4 and this assertion seems unfounded -- I can't see any
> wx as part of the stock Python (2.3.5). Maybe you mean something else?
James Stroud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
...
> For OS X 10.4, wx has come as part of the stock python install. You may
I use Mac OSX 10.4 and this assertion seems unfounded -- I can't see any
wx as part of the stock Python (2.3.5). Maybe you mean something else?
Alex
--
http://mail.python.or
On Oct 14, 1:27 am, James Stroud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> For OS X 10.4, wx has come as part of the stock python install. You may
> want to consider going that route if you develop exclusively for OS
> X--it will keep the size of your distribution down.
>
> James
wx works well on Macs... Linu
John Velman wrote:
> I'm considering moving from Linux to imac. I've recently returned to
> Python (was never very expert) to develop a small gui application. At
> present I plan to use PyGTK with Pango and Cairo.
>
> What surprises may I be in for :-)
>
> (Currently using slackware 11.0 on an
On 14 okt 2007, at 01.21, John Velman wrote:
> I'm considering moving from Linux to imac. I've recently returned to
> Python (was never very expert) to develop a small gui application. At
> present I plan to use PyGTK with Pango and Cairo.
>
> What surprises may I be in for :-)
>
> (Currently
On Oct 13, 7:21 pm, John Velman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm considering moving from Linux to imac. I've recently returned to
> Python (was never very expert) to develop a small gui application. At
> present I plan to use PyGTK with Pango and Cairo.
>
> What surprises may I be in for :-)
>
>
I'm considering moving from Linux to imac. I've recently returned to
Python (was never very expert) to develop a small gui application. At
present I plan to use PyGTK with Pango and Cairo.
What surprises may I be in for :-)
(Currently using slackware 11.0 on an old (8 years) slow (400mhz) mach
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