On Jul 11, 2013, at 6:00 PM, Carl Meyer <carl@oddbird.net> wrote:
On 07/11/2013 03:48 PM, Nick Coghlan wrote:
I was thinking about that, and I'm wondering if the most sensible option may be to claim the "getpip" name on PyPI for ourselves and then do the following:
1. Provide "getpip" in the standard library for 3.4+ (and perhaps in a 2.7.x release) 2. Install it to site-packages in the "Python launcher for Windows" installer for earlier versions
getpip would expose at least one function:
def bootstrap(index_url=None, system_install=False): ...
And executing it as a main module would either:
1. Do nothing, if "import pip" already works 2. Call bootstrap with the appropriate arguments
That way, installation instructions can simply say to unconditionally do:
python -m getpip
And that will either:
1. Report that pip is already installed; 2. Bootstrap pip into the user environment; or 3. Emit a distro-specific message if the distro packagers want to push users to use the system pip instead (since they get to patch the system Python and can tweak the system getpip however they want)
The 2.7 change would then be to create a new download that bundles the Windows launcher into the Windows installer.
Users aren't stupid - the problem with the status quo is really that the bootstrapping instructions are annoyingly complicated and genuinely confusing, not that an explicit bootstrapping step is needed in the first place.
+1. This sounds far better to me than the implicit bootstrapping.
Carl _______________________________________________ Distutils-SIG maillist - Distutils-SIG@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/distutils-sig
Generally +1, the one negative point I see is it's kinda a degradation in functionality to need to type ``python -m getpip`` in every PyEnv (coming from virtualenv). Maybe PyEnv can be smart enough to automatically install pip that's installed in the interpreter it's installed from? Maybe that's too much magic and the answer will be that tools like virtualenvwrapper will continue to exist and wrap that for you. ----------------- Donald Stufft PGP: 0x6E3CBCE93372DCFA // 7C6B 7C5D 5E2B 6356 A926 F04F 6E3C BCE9 3372 DCFA