From: Stephen D. <dr...@gm...> - 2011-02-04 21:02:51
|
> On 30/01/11 19:45, Stephen Dranger wrote: > > > Nothing seems to work -- what on earth could I be doing wrong? > > What options did you use in your setup file? > > > > -- > Regards, > Daryl Tester > > "It's bad enough to have two heads, but it's worse when one's unoccupied." > -- Scatterbrain, "I'm with Stupid." I've tried the basic options found in the tutorial, adding "sip" in the "includes" section for PyQt, changing "console" to "windows", using the "bundle" option, and also this more complex script: http://pastebin.com/HhXShFjM and none of them seem to work. |
From: Stephen D. <dr...@gm...> - 2011-02-14 16:11:45
|
> On 02/04/2011 10:02 PM, Stephen Dranger wrote: > >> On 30/01/11 19:45, Stephen Dranger wrote: > >> > >>> Nothing seems to work -- what on earth could I be doing wrong? > >> > >> What options did you use in your setup file? > > What you are probably missing is the image plugins of QT. > I don't know a generic way to do this, but what I did roughly is: > > Locate the plugins for QT (currently on a Linux PC, so I can't look it up) > The leaf directory is called 'imageformats' and should contain files like > qgif4.dll > qjpeg4.dll > qmng4.dll > > add them to your py2exe 'data_files' section with 'imageformats' as > target directory. > > > I guess, that you find more if you search for QT imageplugins and py2exe > > As I don't have a windows host here I can't give you the exact answer. > Unfortunately, this is one of the first things I tried, but I simply copied the imageformats folder to the executable's directory. I just now tried putting it directly into data_files, but it still had no effect. |
From: Gelonida <gel...@gm...> - 2011-02-14 02:20:26
|
On 02/04/2011 10:02 PM, Stephen Dranger wrote: >> On 30/01/11 19:45, Stephen Dranger wrote: >> >>> Nothing seems to work -- what on earth could I be doing wrong? >> >> What options did you use in your setup file? What you are probably missing is the image plugins of QT. I don't know a generic way to do this, but what I did roughly is: Locate the plugins for QT (currently on a Linux PC, so I can't look it up) The leaf directory is called 'imageformats' and should contain files like qgif4.dll qjpeg4.dll qmng4.dll add them to your py2exe 'data_files' section with 'imageformats' as target directory. I guess, that you find more if you search for QT imageplugins and py2exe As I don't have a windows host here I can't give you the exact answer. >> >> >> >> -- >> Regards, >> Daryl Tester >> >> "It's bad enough to have two heads, but it's worse when one's unoccupied." >> -- Scatterbrain, "I'm with Stupid." > > I've tried the basic options found in the tutorial, adding "sip" in > the "includes" section for PyQt, changing "console" to "windows", > using the "bundle" option, and also this more complex script: > > http://pastebin.com/HhXShFjM > > and none of them seem to work. > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > The modern datacenter depends on network connectivity to access resources > and provide services. The best practices for maximizing a physical server's > connectivity to a physical network are well understood - see how these > rules translate into the virtual world? > http://p.sf.net/sfu/oracle-sfdevnlfb |