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author | Greg Ward <gward@python.net> | 2000-09-12 23:55:19 (GMT) |
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committer | Greg Ward <gward@python.net> | 2000-09-12 23:55:19 (GMT) |
commit | e24f05e25b61009a192ddae771955fa7702d18db (patch) | |
tree | 13ca479df357e45cb447b00598a37c2407d964a4 /Doc/inst | |
parent | 078fc0816d12c8cb7c5b6bf129d2419ff06d2106 (diff) | |
download | cpython-e24f05e25b61009a192ddae771955fa7702d18db.zip cpython-e24f05e25b61009a192ddae771955fa7702d18db.tar.gz cpython-e24f05e25b61009a192ddae771955fa7702d18db.tar.bz2 |
Improve Windows and Mac OS-specific instructions for running the
setup script. Also added a comment about how it *should* work on Mac OS.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/inst')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/inst/inst.tex | 37 |
1 files changed, 27 insertions, 10 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/inst/inst.tex b/Doc/inst/inst.tex index 967df55..4409501 100644 --- a/Doc/inst/inst.tex +++ b/Doc/inst/inst.tex @@ -168,8 +168,8 @@ a module distribution using the Distutils is usually one simple command: python setup.py install \end{verbatim} On Unix, you'd run this command from a shell prompt; on Windows, you -have to open a command prompt window and do it there; on Mac~OS ... -\XXX{what the heck do you do on Mac~OS?}. +have to open a command prompt window (``DOS box'') and do it there; on +Mac~OS, things are a tad more complicated (see below). \subsection{Platform variations} @@ -185,18 +185,35 @@ cd foo-1.0 python setup.py install \end{verbatim} -On Windows, you'd probably unpack the archive before opening the command -prompt. If you downloaded the archive file to -\file{C:\textbackslash{}Temp}, then it probably unpacked (depending on -your software) into -\file{C:\textbackslash{}Temp\textbackslash{}foo-1.0}; from the command -prompt window, you would then run +On Windows, you'd probably download \file{foo-1.0.zip}. If you +downloaded the archive file to \file{C:\textbackslash{}Temp}, then it +would unpack into \file{C:\textbackslash{}Temp\textbackslash{}foo-1.0}; +you can use either a GUI archive manipulator (such as WinZip) or a +command-line tool (such as \program{unzip} or \program{pkunzip}) to +unpack the archive. Then, open a command prompt window (``DOS box''), +and run: \begin{verbatim} -cd c:\temp\foo-1.0 +cd c:\Temp\foo-1.0 python setup.py install \end{verbatim} -On Mac~OS, ... \XXX{again, how do you run Python scripts on Mac~OS?} +On Mac~OS, you have to go through a bit more effort to supply +command-line arguments to the setup script: +\begin{itemize} +\item hit option-double-click on the script's icon (or option-drop it + onto the Python interpreter's icon) +\item press the ``Set unix-style command line'' button +\item set the ``Keep stdio window open on termination'' if you're + interested in seeing the output of the setup script (which is usually + voluminous and often useful) +\item (??) when the command-line dialog pops up, enter ``install'' (you + can, of course, enter any Distutils command-line as described in this + document or in the ``Distributing Python Modules'' document: just + leave of the initial \code{python setup.py} and you'll be fine) +\end{itemize} +\XXX{this should change: every Distutils setup script will need + command-line arguments for every run (and should probably keep stdout + around), so all this should happen automatically for setup scripts} \subsection{Splitting the job up} |