On 25/02/2015 16:40, Mark Lawrence wrote:
> On 25/02/2015 08:26, Tim Golden wrote:
>> [... re installing with ensurepip disabled ...]
>>
>> On 24/02/2015 23:05, Albert-Jan Roskam wrote:
>>> Personally I find that Python is incomplete without pip and setuptools.
>>
>> Of course; that's why the ensur
On 25/02/2015 08:26, Tim Golden wrote:
[... re installing with ensurepip disabled ...]
On 24/02/2015 23:05, Albert-Jan Roskam wrote:
Personally I find that Python is incomplete without pip and setuptools.
Of course; that's why the ensurepip was added to the installers. But
there are other way
[... re installing with ensurepip disabled ...]
On 24/02/2015 23:05, Albert-Jan Roskam wrote:
> Personally I find that Python is incomplete without pip and setuptools.
Of course; that's why the ensurepip was added to the installers. But
there are other ways of installing pip after the event. Incl
Personally I find that Python is incomplete without pip and setuptools.--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 23/02/2015 15:29, Tim Golden wrote:
> On 23/02/2015 13:57, Colin Atkinson wrote:
>> I am deploying Python to hundreds of machines using SCCM 2012. I am
>> using the below command to install:
>>
>> Msiexec /i “python.msi” TARGETDIR=”C:\Program Files\Python”
>> ALLUSERS=1 /qn
>>
>> Even though I
On 23/02/2015 13:57, Colin Atkinson wrote:
> I am deploying Python to hundreds of machines using SCCM 2012. I am
> using the below command to install:
>
> Msiexec /i “python.msi” TARGETDIR=”C:\Program Files\Python”
> ALLUSERS=1 /qn
>
> Even though I am using /qn, a command prompt still appears