I do not see how a build script (to build python?) would be needed.  The existing installers would be sufficient.  The packages themselves would have to be XML and powershell (that is the NuGet/Chocolatey infrastructure.)

As it stands, hosting your own nuget/chocolatey feed required a windows server (not ideal, but workable).  I am finding it hard to actually find the api specification.

On 9/8/2015 18:18, Wes Turner wrote:

* Do you have a chocolatey nuget build  script for [buildbot, jenkins]? Written in Python?
  * https://www.python.org/dev/buildbot/
    * https://github.com/conda/conda-recipes/tree/master/python-2.7.8
    * https://github.com/conda/conda-recipes/blob/master/python-3.5/meta.yaml

* A pkg repo maintainer could
   scrape/poll these
   * https://www.python.org/downloads/windows/
      * [ ] (schema.org RDFa/JSONLD for releases would be great)
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NuGet
* http://docs.continuum.io/anaconda/install#windows-install (2.7, 3.4)
  * http://docs.continuum.io/anaconda/pkg-docs

On Sep 8, 2015 4:37 AM, "Alexander Walters" <tritium-list@sdamon.com> wrote:
It would be incredibly convenient, especially for users of AppVayor's continuous integration service, if there were a(n official) repository for chocolatey containing recent releases of python.  The official Chocolatey gallery contains installers for the latest 2.7 and 3.4 (as of this post).  What I am proposing would contain the most commonly used pythons in testing (2.6 2.7 3.3 3.4 and future releases).

I am perfectly willing to set up a repo for my own use, but am posting this to see if there is community support...or psf support... for setting up an official repo.
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