> Is there something like cpan for python? I like python's syntax, but I use perl because of cpan and the tremendous modules that it has. --
Please search the mailing list archives.
This subject has been discussed to absolute death.
Draw your own conclusions about what is currently and may, in the future, be available.
S
It's called PyPI or Cheese Shop:
<OFF>
Is it only me or others also mentally read C-SPAN when somebody writes CPAN?
</OFF>
Cheers,
Daniel
--
Psss, psss, put it down! - http://www.cafepress.com/putitdown
> <OFF>
> Is it only me or others also mentally read C-SPAN when somebody writes
> CPAN? </OFF>
No, it's not just you. This is the first time I've realised it wasn't
C-SPAN.
--
Steven
>
> On Feb 28, 2010, at 9:28 AM, Someone Something wrote:
>
>> Is there something like cpan for python? I like python's syntax, but
>> Iuse perl because of cpan and the tremendous modules that it has. --
>
> Please search the mailing list archives.
>
> This subject has been discussed to absolute death.
But somehow the question is not in the FAQ, though the answer is. See:
<http://www.python.org/doc/faq/library/#how-do-i-find-a-module-or-application-to-perform-task-x>
--
Randolph Fritz
design machine group, architecture department, university of washington
rfr...@u.washington.edu -or- rfri...@gmail.com
> On 2010-02-28 06:31:56 -0800, sste...@gmail.com said:
>>
>> On Feb 28, 2010, at 9:28 AM, Someone Something wrote:
>>
>>> Is there something like cpan for python? I like python's syntax, but
>>> Iuse perl because of cpan and the tremendous modules that it has. --
>>
>> Please search the mailing list archives.
>>
>> This subject has been discussed to absolute death.
>
> But somehow the question is not in the FAQ, though the answer is. See:
>
> <http://www.python.org/doc/faq/library/#how-do-i-find-a-module-or-application-to-perform-task-x>
There
>
is also a program called cpan, distributed with Perl. It is used for
searching, downloading, installing and testing modules from the CPAN
repository. It's far more extensive than setuptools. AFAIK the python
community has developed nothing like it.
-Tom
python have easy_install
> On 03/03/2010 09:47 AM, TomF wrote:
[..]
>> There
>> is also a program called cpan, distributed with Perl. It is used for
>> searching, downloading, installing and testing modules from the CPAN
>> repository. It's far more extensive than setuptools. AFAIK the python
>> community has developed nothing like it.
>
> python have easy_install
How easy is it to /remove/ something? ;-) (Last time I checked I read
something like "manually remove the .egg"...
--
John Bokma j3b
Hacking & Hiking in Mexico - http://johnbokma.com/
http://castleamber.com/ - Perl & Python Development
Indeed. And that program is nothing like the Perl ‘cpan’ program.
--
\ “Value your freedom or you will lose it, teaches history. |
`\ “Don't bother us with politics,” respond those who don't want |
_o__) to learn.” —Richard Stallman, 2002 |
Ben Finney
easy_install is part of setuptools. As I said, nothing like cpan.
-Tom
Have a look at [pip](http://cheeseshop.python.org/pypi/pip). It should
support uninstalling packages.
---John
Thanks John. However:
"Known exceptions include pure-distutils packages installed with
python setup.py install"
I want to remove something that I installed that way (because it's
installation procedure seems to be broken; opensocial) I understand that
this can't be blamed on pip, but it's odd that in this century it's
still hard to install/uninstall modules :-(
Have you looked in a file easy-install.pth in site-packages? In my
experience it's enough to delete the line for package from there and
delete package's egg or directory.
I agree that this is kind of backward, though.
Regards,
mk
> I want to remove something that I installed [with its Distutils build
> system] (because it's installation procedure seems to be broken;
> opensocial) I understand that this can't be blamed on pip, but it's
> odd that in this century it's still hard to install/uninstall modules
> :-(
That's because of the last-century legacy of Distutils's design.
--
\ “Imagine a world without hypothetical situations.” —anonymous |
`\ |
_o__) |
Ben Finney