On Apr 18, 2014, at 6:37 PM, Nick Coghlan
On 18 April 2014 18:28, Donald Stufft
wrote: On Apr 18, 2014, at 6:24 PM, Nick Coghlan
wrote: On 18 April 2014 18:17, Paul Moore
wrote: On 18 April 2014 22:57, Donald Stufft
wrote: Maybe Nick meant ``pip install ipython[all]`` but I don’t actually know what that includes. I’ve never used ipython except for the console.
The hard bit is the QT Console, but that's because there aren't wheels for PySide AFAICT.
IPython, matplotlib, scikit-learn, NumPy, nltk, etc. The things that let you break programming out of the low level box of controlling the computer, and connect it directly to the more universal high level task of understanding and visualising the world.
Regards, Nick.
Paul
-- Nick Coghlan | ncoghlan@gmail.com | Brisbane, Australia
FWIW It’s been David Cournapeau’s opinion (on Twitter at least) that some/all/most (I’m not sure exactly which) of these can be handled by Wheels (they just aren’t right now!).
Yeah, I think they're fixable too. And after thinking through the implications of recommending a specific sumo distribution, that actually does seem to be a more straightforward path as a "default entry point".
I still see merit in working with the conda folks to make it easier for Windows and Mac OS folks to keep their Python installations up to date, and for Linux users to stay out of the system Python in a distro independent manner, but that's a separate discussion from the python.org download pages one.
Sure, and for *nix based ones there’s also pyenv which I personally use and like :)
Cheers, Nick.
-- Nick Coghlan | ncoghlan@gmail.com | Brisbane, Australia
----------------- Donald Stufft PGP: 0x6E3CBCE93372DCFA // 7C6B 7C5D 5E2B 6356 A926 F04F 6E3C BCE9 3372 DCFA