Minimal instructions for using the Makefile here. Also a clear
statement that this is a proof-of-concept meant for people to experiment with, nothing more.
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This directory contains a Makefile that will create a proof-of-concept
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Mac OS X application for Python. The process is far from streamlined,
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and it will definitely change in future releases of Python, but I wanted to
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include this in the current distribution so people could play with it.
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To create a fullblown Python.app proceed as follows.
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1. In the main Python source directory configure python with
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configure --enable-framework --with-suffix
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2. Do a "make clean" if you did a previous build, then "make".
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3. Install this as a framework with "make frameworkinstall". This puts a Python
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framework into /Library/Frameworks.
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4. Come back here (Mac/OSX) and build and install the application,
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with "make install".
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5. It is probably a good idea to add the Mac-specific modules to the framework,
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with "make installmacsubtree". This puts a MacPython lib directory into
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sys.prefix/Mac/Lib. Again, this is a temporary measure.
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You are now done. In your Applications you should have a "Python", with the icon
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being a falling 16 Ton weight with a shadow under it. You can drop Python scripts
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on this and the will be run, in a full-windowing environment. Note that you
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do not get sys.stdin, and that sys.stdout goes to the console (Use
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Applications/Utilities/Console to see it).
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Something to take note of is that the ".rsrc" files in the distribution are not
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actually resource files, they're AppleSingle encoded resource files.
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Jack Jansen, jack@oratrix.com, 6-Sep-01.
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