Can't test it until getting to a Win2K box, because the non-Admin way
of setting file associations on Win2K doesn't work on any other flavor
of Windows (and other flavors of Windows never need Admin privs to
do it the old way).
+ Consequently got rid of the "Register file associations" Component and
associated GUI.
+ Added a line to the summary saying whether or not this is an Admin-level
install (I fear that will be an important clue someday).
+ Minor fiddling to the summary to reduce the # of lines. Added a
horizontal scrollbar in case the install path is very long.
+ Reworked the way the Main and Tools components share pydoc.pyw; cleaner
and simpler.
and install the Python and MS runtime DLLs into the Python dir instead of
a system dir.
Initial value is taken from new compiler vrbl _DOADMIN_ (default true),
and forced to false if the user doesn't have admin privs.
This makes it possible to *test* non-admin installs on machines where the
distinction doesn't exist (like my home box), via just changing _DOADMIN_.
It may also be useful for users who don't *want* an installer to
scribble into their system dir (for example, me(! most days)), but that
would require adding more GUI to let them get at it.
+ Fiddle vrbls so Win2K add/remove can display version w/o future manual
script fiddling.
+ Break apart the mysterious wizard-generated Win2K "Edit 3 Registry Keys"
script items by hand into 3 separate items, so you can see what the heck
they're doing in the script view.
+ pydoc.pyw was a problem: it's installed by both the Main and Tools
components. So when both were selected, the second time it got
installed Wise figured it was overwriting a pre-existing version, and
made a backup copy in BACKUP. A rollback-uninstall then restored that,
leaving the Tools/Scripts/ directory non-empty, and so Wise couldn't
remove that directory (or any above it). Fixed by installing pydoc.pyw
at most once.
+ Rearranged and commented the "register file extensions" section, because
it was confusing and needs more work: turns out it's not true that
Win2K requires Admin privs to register file extensions, BUT, if you
don't have Admin privs, Win2K requires a new way to register file
extensions, and a way that doesn't blow up but doesn't do any good either
on earlier Windows flavors. I think I know how to get this done, but am
too depressed to do it right now <0.7 wink>.
starting the test suite proper. If _socket fails to build, that will
make this test fail with an ImportError -- handled by the test harness
as "no such module _socket" -- instead of an AttributeError deep in
CGIHTTPServer.
by Albert Hofkamp. Some editing has been done for style and markup
consistency.
This also supplies an example of importing modules and calling a function
defined in the module, so this closes SF bug #440037 as well.
(The long example code was moved to a separate file so that it would
format properly.)
names of the test methods were not changed from the Zope-standard "check"
names to the Python-standard "test_" names, so the tests were not actually
being run.
Added test of hexadecimal character references as a regression check for
SF bug #445196.
Fix handling of hexadecimal character references (legal in XHTML) so that
they are properly interpreted as character references.
This fixes SF bug #445196.
+ Ditto pydoc.
(IMO, both should have been done long ago -- simply didn't occur to
me before)
+ Build the summary text into a vrbl instead of a temp file. Doh! Less
fiddling, and should avoid another class of Win2K permission problems.
Bug: the "auto vertical scrollbar" control on the summary page doesn't
work (never creates a scrollbar, no matter how much text). So forced a
vertical scrollbar there.
the --with-suffix=.exe, but it seems that that is also true for cygwin
(or not? should I automatically set it?)
- Got --with-next-framework to build on OSX. This is only the build bit,
the install still has to be done manually. Moreover, the Python build order
isn't really suited to frameworks (where you want to do 'build lib',
'install lib and framework', 'link executable against installed framework'
in that order).
Added an optional (and ignored) 3d parameter to open() to make the signature compatible with posixmodule.
Added the various O_ constants (by stealing the code from posixmodule).
test_fileinput now passes.
summary of the preceding choices. No idea if this is "the right way" to
do it, but it's exactly painful enough to make me suspect it's the only
way <wink>.
get() method; just calling them is sufficient. (There was a get() method
for this in an early version of the implementation.)
Reported by Mats Wichmann.