| :tocdepth: 2 |
| |
| .. _windows-faq: |
| |
| ===================== |
| Python on Windows FAQ |
| ===================== |
| |
| .. contents:: |
| |
| .. XXX need review for Python 3. |
| XXX need review for Windows Vista/Seven? |
| |
| |
| How do I run a Python program under Windows? |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| This is not necessarily a straightforward question. If you are already familiar |
| with running programs from the Windows command line then everything will seem |
| obvious; otherwise, you might need a little more guidance. There are also |
| differences between Windows 95, 98, NT, ME, 2000 and XP which can add to the |
| confusion. |
| |
| .. sidebar:: |Python Development on XP|_ |
| :subtitle: `Python Development on XP`_ |
| |
| This series of screencasts aims to get you up and running with Python on |
| Windows XP. The knowledge is distilled into 1.5 hours and will get you up |
| and running with the right Python distribution, coding in your choice of IDE, |
| and debugging and writing solid code with unit-tests. |
| |
| .. |Python Development on XP| image:: python-video-icon.png |
| .. _`Python Development on XP`: |
| http://www.showmedo.com/videos/series?name=pythonOzsvaldPyNewbieSeries |
| |
| Unless you use some sort of integrated development environment, you will end up |
| *typing* Windows commands into what is variously referred to as a "DOS window" |
| or "Command prompt window". Usually you can create such a window from your |
| Start menu; under Windows 2000 the menu selection is :menuselection:`Start --> |
| Programs --> Accessories --> Command Prompt`. You should be able to recognize |
| when you have started such a window because you will see a Windows "command |
| prompt", which usually looks like this:: |
| |
| C:\> |
| |
| The letter may be different, and there might be other things after it, so you |
| might just as easily see something like:: |
| |
| D:\Steve\Projects\Python> |
| |
| depending on how your computer has been set up and what else you have recently |
| done with it. Once you have started such a window, you are well on the way to |
| running Python programs. |
| |
| You need to realize that your Python scripts have to be processed by another |
| program called the Python interpreter. The interpreter reads your script, |
| compiles it into bytecodes, and then executes the bytecodes to run your |
| program. So, how do you arrange for the interpreter to handle your Python? |
| |
| First, you need to make sure that your command window recognises the word |
| "python" as an instruction to start the interpreter. If you have opened a |
| command window, you should try entering the command ``python`` and hitting |
| return. You should then see something like:: |
| |
| Python 2.2 (#28, Dec 21 2001, 12:21:22) [MSC 32 bit (Intel)] on win32 |
| Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. |
| >>> |
| |
| You have started the interpreter in "interactive mode". That means you can enter |
| Python statements or expressions interactively and have them executed or |
| evaluated while you wait. This is one of Python's strongest features. Check it |
| by entering a few expressions of your choice and seeing the results:: |
| |
| >>> print("Hello") |
| Hello |
| >>> "Hello" * 3 |
| HelloHelloHello |
| |
| Many people use the interactive mode as a convenient yet highly programmable |
| calculator. When you want to end your interactive Python session, hold the Ctrl |
| key down while you enter a Z, then hit the "Enter" key to get back to your |
| Windows command prompt. |
| |
| You may also find that you have a Start-menu entry such as :menuselection:`Start |
| --> Programs --> Python 2.2 --> Python (command line)` that results in you |
| seeing the ``>>>`` prompt in a new window. If so, the window will disappear |
| after you enter the Ctrl-Z character; Windows is running a single "python" |
| command in the window, and closes it when you terminate the interpreter. |
| |
| If the ``python`` command, instead of displaying the interpreter prompt ``>>>``, |
| gives you a message like:: |
| |
| 'python' is not recognized as an internal or external command, |
| operable program or batch file. |
| |
| .. sidebar:: |Adding Python to DOS Path|_ |
| :subtitle: `Adding Python to DOS Path`_ |
| |
| Python is not added to the DOS path by default. This screencast will walk |
| you through the steps to add the correct entry to the `System Path`, allowing |
| Python to be executed from the command-line by all users. |
| |
| .. |Adding Python to DOS Path| image:: python-video-icon.png |
| .. _`Adding Python to DOS Path`: |
| http://showmedo.com/videos/video?name=960000&fromSeriesID=96 |
| |
| |
| or:: |
| |
| Bad command or filename |
| |
| then you need to make sure that your computer knows where to find the Python |
| interpreter. To do this you will have to modify a setting called PATH, which is |
| a list of directories where Windows will look for programs. |
| |
| You should arrange for Python's installation directory to be added to the PATH |
| of every command window as it starts. If you installed Python fairly recently |
| then the command :: |
| |
| dir C:\py* |
| |
| will probably tell you where it is installed; the usual location is something |
| like ``C:\Python23``. Otherwise you will be reduced to a search of your whole |
| disk ... use :menuselection:`Tools --> Find` or hit the :guilabel:`Search` |
| button and look for "python.exe". Supposing you discover that Python is |
| installed in the ``C:\Python23`` directory (the default at the time of writing), |
| you should make sure that entering the command :: |
| |
| c:\Python23\python |
| |
| starts up the interpreter as above (and don't forget you'll need a "CTRL-Z" and |
| an "Enter" to get out of it). Once you have verified the directory, you need to |
| add it to the start-up routines your computer goes through. For older versions |
| of Windows the easiest way to do this is to edit the ``C:\AUTOEXEC.BAT`` |
| file. You would want to add a line like the following to ``AUTOEXEC.BAT``:: |
| |
| PATH C:\Python23;%PATH% |
| |
| For Windows NT, 2000 and (I assume) XP, you will need to add a string such as :: |
| |
| ;C:\Python23 |
| |
| to the current setting for the PATH environment variable, which you will find in |
| the properties window of "My Computer" under the "Advanced" tab. Note that if |
| you have sufficient privilege you might get a choice of installing the settings |
| either for the Current User or for System. The latter is preferred if you want |
| everybody to be able to run Python on the machine. |
| |
| If you aren't confident doing any of these manipulations yourself, ask for help! |
| At this stage you may want to reboot your system to make absolutely sure the new |
| setting has taken effect. You probably won't need to reboot for Windows NT, XP |
| or 2000. You can also avoid it in earlier versions by editing the file |
| ``C:\WINDOWS\COMMAND\CMDINIT.BAT`` instead of ``AUTOEXEC.BAT``. |
| |
| You should now be able to start a new command window, enter ``python`` at the |
| ``C:\>`` (or whatever) prompt, and see the ``>>>`` prompt that indicates the |
| Python interpreter is reading interactive commands. |
| |
| Let's suppose you have a program called ``pytest.py`` in directory |
| ``C:\Steve\Projects\Python``. A session to run that program might look like |
| this:: |
| |
| C:\> cd \Steve\Projects\Python |
| C:\Steve\Projects\Python> python pytest.py |
| |
| Because you added a file name to the command to start the interpreter, when it |
| starts up it reads the Python script in the named file, compiles it, executes |
| it, and terminates, so you see another ``C:\>`` prompt. You might also have |
| entered :: |
| |
| C:\> python \Steve\Projects\Python\pytest.py |
| |
| if you hadn't wanted to change your current directory. |
| |
| Under NT, 2000 and XP you may well find that the installation process has also |
| arranged that the command ``pytest.py`` (or, if the file isn't in the current |
| directory, ``C:\Steve\Projects\Python\pytest.py``) will automatically recognize |
| the ".py" extension and run the Python interpreter on the named file. Using this |
| feature is fine, but *some* versions of Windows have bugs which mean that this |
| form isn't exactly equivalent to using the interpreter explicitly, so be |
| careful. |
| |
| The important things to remember are: |
| |
| 1. Start Python from the Start Menu, or make sure the PATH is set correctly so |
| Windows can find the Python interpreter. :: |
| |
| python |
| |
| should give you a '>>>' prompt from the Python interpreter. Don't forget the |
| CTRL-Z and ENTER to terminate the interpreter (and, if you started the window |
| from the Start Menu, make the window disappear). |
| |
| 2. Once this works, you run programs with commands:: |
| |
| python {program-file} |
| |
| 3. When you know the commands to use you can build Windows shortcuts to run the |
| Python interpreter on any of your scripts, naming particular working |
| directories, and adding them to your menus. Take a look at :: |
| |
| python --help |
| |
| if your needs are complex. |
| |
| 4. Interactive mode (where you see the ``>>>`` prompt) is best used for checking |
| that individual statements and expressions do what you think they will, and |
| for developing code by experiment. |
| |
| |
| How do I make Python scripts executable? |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| |
| On Windows 2000, the standard Python installer already associates the .py |
| extension with a file type (Python.File) and gives that file type an open |
| command that runs the interpreter (``D:\Program Files\Python\python.exe "%1" |
| %*``). This is enough to make scripts executable from the command prompt as |
| 'foo.py'. If you'd rather be able to execute the script by simple typing 'foo' |
| with no extension you need to add .py to the PATHEXT environment variable. |
| |
| On Windows NT, the steps taken by the installer as described above allow you to |
| run a script with 'foo.py', but a longtime bug in the NT command processor |
| prevents you from redirecting the input or output of any script executed in this |
| way. This is often important. |
| |
| The incantation for making a Python script executable under WinNT is to give the |
| file an extension of .cmd and add the following as the first line:: |
| |
| @setlocal enableextensions & python -x %~f0 %* & goto :EOF |
| |
| |
| Why does Python sometimes take so long to start? |
| ------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| Usually Python starts very quickly on Windows, but occasionally there are bug |
| reports that Python suddenly begins to take a long time to start up. This is |
| made even more puzzling because Python will work fine on other Windows systems |
| which appear to be configured identically. |
| |
| The problem may be caused by a misconfiguration of virus checking software on |
| the problem machine. Some virus scanners have been known to introduce startup |
| overhead of two orders of magnitude when the scanner is configured to monitor |
| all reads from the filesystem. Try checking the configuration of virus scanning |
| software on your systems to ensure that they are indeed configured identically. |
| McAfee, when configured to scan all file system read activity, is a particular |
| offender. |
| |
| |
| Where is Freeze for Windows? |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| "Freeze" is a program that allows you to ship a Python program as a single |
| stand-alone executable file. It is *not* a compiler; your programs don't run |
| any faster, but they are more easily distributable, at least to platforms with |
| the same OS and CPU. Read the README file of the freeze program for more |
| disclaimers. |
| |
| You can use freeze on Windows, but you must download the source tree (see |
| http://www.python.org/download/source). The freeze program is in the |
| ``Tools\freeze`` subdirectory of the source tree. |
| |
| You need the Microsoft VC++ compiler, and you probably need to build Python. |
| The required project files are in the PCbuild directory. |
| |
| |
| Is a ``*.pyd`` file the same as a DLL? |
| -------------------------------------- |
| |
| .. XXX update for py3k (PyInit_foo) |
| |
| Yes, .pyd files are dll's, but there are a few differences. If you have a DLL |
| named ``foo.pyd``, then it must have a function ``initfoo()``. You can then |
| write Python "import foo", and Python will search for foo.pyd (as well as |
| foo.py, foo.pyc) and if it finds it, will attempt to call ``initfoo()`` to |
| initialize it. You do not link your .exe with foo.lib, as that would cause |
| Windows to require the DLL to be present. |
| |
| Note that the search path for foo.pyd is PYTHONPATH, not the same as the path |
| that Windows uses to search for foo.dll. Also, foo.pyd need not be present to |
| run your program, whereas if you linked your program with a dll, the dll is |
| required. Of course, foo.pyd is required if you want to say ``import foo``. In |
| a DLL, linkage is declared in the source code with ``__declspec(dllexport)``. |
| In a .pyd, linkage is defined in a list of available functions. |
| |
| |
| How can I embed Python into a Windows application? |
| -------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Embedding the Python interpreter in a Windows app can be summarized as follows: |
| |
| 1. Do _not_ build Python into your .exe file directly. On Windows, Python must |
| be a DLL to handle importing modules that are themselves DLL's. (This is the |
| first key undocumented fact.) Instead, link to :file:`python{NN}.dll`; it is |
| typically installed in ``C:\Windows\System``. *NN* is the Python version, a |
| number such as "23" for Python 2.3. |
| |
| You can link to Python in two different ways. Load-time linking means |
| linking against :file:`python{NN}.lib`, while run-time linking means linking |
| against :file:`python{NN}.dll`. (General note: :file:`python{NN}.lib` is the |
| so-called "import lib" corresponding to :file:`python{NN}.dll`. It merely |
| defines symbols for the linker.) |
| |
| Run-time linking greatly simplifies link options; everything happens at run |
| time. Your code must load :file:`python{NN}.dll` using the Windows |
| ``LoadLibraryEx()`` routine. The code must also use access routines and data |
| in :file:`python{NN}.dll` (that is, Python's C API's) using pointers obtained |
| by the Windows ``GetProcAddress()`` routine. Macros can make using these |
| pointers transparent to any C code that calls routines in Python's C API. |
| |
| Borland note: convert :file:`python{NN}.lib` to OMF format using Coff2Omf.exe |
| first. |
| |
| .. XXX what about static linking? |
| |
| 2. If you use SWIG, it is easy to create a Python "extension module" that will |
| make the app's data and methods available to Python. SWIG will handle just |
| about all the grungy details for you. The result is C code that you link |
| *into* your .exe file (!) You do _not_ have to create a DLL file, and this |
| also simplifies linking. |
| |
| 3. SWIG will create an init function (a C function) whose name depends on the |
| name of the extension module. For example, if the name of the module is leo, |
| the init function will be called initleo(). If you use SWIG shadow classes, |
| as you should, the init function will be called initleoc(). This initializes |
| a mostly hidden helper class used by the shadow class. |
| |
| The reason you can link the C code in step 2 into your .exe file is that |
| calling the initialization function is equivalent to importing the module |
| into Python! (This is the second key undocumented fact.) |
| |
| 4. In short, you can use the following code to initialize the Python interpreter |
| with your extension module. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| #include "python.h" |
| ... |
| Py_Initialize(); // Initialize Python. |
| initmyAppc(); // Initialize (import) the helper class. |
| PyRun_SimpleString("import myApp") ; // Import the shadow class. |
| |
| 5. There are two problems with Python's C API which will become apparent if you |
| use a compiler other than MSVC, the compiler used to build pythonNN.dll. |
| |
| Problem 1: The so-called "Very High Level" functions that take FILE * |
| arguments will not work in a multi-compiler environment because each |
| compiler's notion of a struct FILE will be different. From an implementation |
| standpoint these are very _low_ level functions. |
| |
| Problem 2: SWIG generates the following code when generating wrappers to void |
| functions: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| Py_INCREF(Py_None); |
| _resultobj = Py_None; |
| return _resultobj; |
| |
| Alas, Py_None is a macro that expands to a reference to a complex data |
| structure called _Py_NoneStruct inside pythonNN.dll. Again, this code will |
| fail in a mult-compiler environment. Replace such code by: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| return Py_BuildValue(""); |
| |
| It may be possible to use SWIG's ``%typemap`` command to make the change |
| automatically, though I have not been able to get this to work (I'm a |
| complete SWIG newbie). |
| |
| 6. Using a Python shell script to put up a Python interpreter window from inside |
| your Windows app is not a good idea; the resulting window will be independent |
| of your app's windowing system. Rather, you (or the wxPythonWindow class) |
| should create a "native" interpreter window. It is easy to connect that |
| window to the Python interpreter. You can redirect Python's i/o to _any_ |
| object that supports read and write, so all you need is a Python object |
| (defined in your extension module) that contains read() and write() methods. |
| |
| |
| How do I use Python for CGI? |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| On the Microsoft IIS server or on the Win95 MS Personal Web Server you set up |
| Python in the same way that you would set up any other scripting engine. |
| |
| Run regedt32 and go to:: |
| |
| HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\W3SVC\Parameters\ScriptMap |
| |
| and enter the following line (making any specific changes that your system may |
| need):: |
| |
| .py :REG_SZ: c:\<path to python>\python.exe -u %s %s |
| |
| This line will allow you to call your script with a simple reference like: |
| ``http://yourserver/scripts/yourscript.py`` provided "scripts" is an |
| "executable" directory for your server (which it usually is by default). The |
| :option:`-u` flag specifies unbuffered and binary mode for stdin - needed when |
| working with binary data. |
| |
| In addition, it is recommended that using ".py" may not be a good idea for the |
| file extensions when used in this context (you might want to reserve ``*.py`` |
| for support modules and use ``*.cgi`` or ``*.cgp`` for "main program" scripts). |
| |
| In order to set up Internet Information Services 5 to use Python for CGI |
| processing, please see the following links: |
| |
| http://www.e-coli.net/pyiis_server.html (for Win2k Server) |
| http://www.e-coli.net/pyiis.html (for Win2k pro) |
| |
| Configuring Apache is much simpler. In the Apache configuration file |
| ``httpd.conf``, add the following line at the end of the file:: |
| |
| ScriptInterpreterSource Registry |
| |
| Then, give your Python CGI-scripts the extension .py and put them in the cgi-bin |
| directory. |
| |
| |
| How do I keep editors from inserting tabs into my Python source? |
| ---------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The FAQ does not recommend using tabs, and the Python style guide, :pep:`8`, |
| recommends 4 spaces for distributed Python code; this is also the Emacs |
| python-mode default. |
| |
| Under any editor, mixing tabs and spaces is a bad idea. MSVC is no different in |
| this respect, and is easily configured to use spaces: Take :menuselection:`Tools |
| --> Options --> Tabs`, and for file type "Default" set "Tab size" and "Indent |
| size" to 4, and select the "Insert spaces" radio button. |
| |
| If you suspect mixed tabs and spaces are causing problems in leading whitespace, |
| run Python with the :option:`-t` switch or run ``Tools/Scripts/tabnanny.py`` to |
| check a directory tree in batch mode. |
| |
| |
| How do I check for a keypress without blocking? |
| ----------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Use the msvcrt module. This is a standard Windows-specific extension module. |
| It defines a function ``kbhit()`` which checks whether a keyboard hit is |
| present, and ``getch()`` which gets one character without echoing it. |
| |
| |
| How do I emulate os.kill() in Windows? |
| -------------------------------------- |
| |
| Prior to Python 2.7 and 3.2, to terminate a process, you can use :mod:`ctypes`:: |
| |
| import ctypes |
| |
| def kill(pid): |
| """kill function for Win32""" |
| kernel32 = ctypes.windll.kernel32 |
| handle = kernel32.OpenProcess(1, 0, pid) |
| return (0 != kernel32.TerminateProcess(handle, 0)) |
| |
| In 2.7 and 3.2, :func:`os.kill` is implemented similar to the above function, |
| with the additional feature of being able to send CTRL+C and CTRL+BREAK |
| to console subprocesses which are designed to handle those signals. See |
| :func:`os.kill` for further details. |
| |
| |
| Why does os.path.isdir() fail on NT shared directories? |
| ------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The solution appears to be always append the "\\" on the end of shared |
| drives. |
| |
| >>> import os |
| >>> os.path.isdir( '\\\\rorschach\\public') |
| 0 |
| >>> os.path.isdir( '\\\\rorschach\\public\\') |
| 1 |
| |
| It helps to think of share points as being like drive letters. Example:: |
| |
| k: is not a directory |
| k:\ is a directory |
| k:\media is a directory |
| k:\media\ is not a directory |
| |
| The same rules apply if you substitute "k:" with "\\conky\foo":: |
| |
| \\conky\foo is not a directory |
| \\conky\foo\ is a directory |
| \\conky\foo\media is a directory |
| \\conky\foo\media\ is not a directory |
| |
| |
| cgi.py (or other CGI programming) doesn't work sometimes on NT or win95! |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| Be sure you have the latest python.exe, that you are using python.exe rather |
| than a GUI version of Python and that you have configured the server to execute |
| :: |
| |
| "...\python.exe -u ..." |
| |
| for the CGI execution. The :option:`-u` (unbuffered) option on NT and Win95 |
| prevents the interpreter from altering newlines in the standard input and |
| output. Without it post/multipart requests will seem to have the wrong length |
| and binary (e.g. GIF) responses may get garbled (resulting in broken images, PDF |
| files, and other binary downloads failing). |
| |
| |
| Why doesn't os.popen() work in PythonWin on NT? |
| ----------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The reason that os.popen() doesn't work from within PythonWin is due to a bug in |
| Microsoft's C Runtime Library (CRT). The CRT assumes you have a Win32 console |
| attached to the process. |
| |
| You should use the win32pipe module's popen() instead which doesn't depend on |
| having an attached Win32 console. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| import win32pipe |
| f = win32pipe.popen('dir /c c:\\') |
| print(f.readlines()) |
| f.close() |
| |
| |
| Why doesn't os.popen()/win32pipe.popen() work on Win9x? |
| ------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| There is a bug in Win9x that prevents os.popen/win32pipe.popen* from |
| working. The good news is there is a way to work around this problem. The |
| Microsoft Knowledge Base article that you need to lookup is: Q150956. You will |
| find links to the knowledge base at: http://support.microsoft.com/. |
| |
| |
| PyRun_SimpleFile() crashes on Windows but not on Unix; why? |
| ----------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| This is very sensitive to the compiler vendor, version and (perhaps) even |
| options. If the FILE* structure in your embedding program isn't the same as is |
| assumed by the Python interpreter it won't work. |
| |
| The Python 1.5.* DLLs (``python15.dll``) are all compiled with MS VC++ 5.0 and |
| with multithreading-DLL options (``/MD``). |
| |
| If you can't change compilers or flags, try using :c:func:`Py_RunSimpleString`. |
| A trick to get it to run an arbitrary file is to construct a call to |
| :func:`execfile` with the name of your file as argument. |
| |
| Also note that you can not mix-and-match Debug and Release versions. If you |
| wish to use the Debug Multithreaded DLL, then your module *must* have an "_d" |
| appended to the base name. |
| |
| |
| Importing _tkinter fails on Windows 95/98: why? |
| ------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| Sometimes, the import of _tkinter fails on Windows 95 or 98, complaining with a |
| message like the following:: |
| |
| ImportError: DLL load failed: One of the library files needed |
| to run this application cannot be found. |
| |
| It could be that you haven't installed Tcl/Tk, but if you did install Tcl/Tk, |
| and the Wish application works correctly, the problem may be that its installer |
| didn't manage to edit the autoexec.bat file correctly. It tries to add a |
| statement that changes the PATH environment variable to include the Tcl/Tk 'bin' |
| subdirectory, but sometimes this edit doesn't quite work. Opening it with |
| notepad usually reveals what the problem is. |
| |
| (One additional hint, noted by David Szafranski: you can't use long filenames |
| here; e.g. use ``C:\PROGRA~1\Tcl\bin`` instead of ``C:\Program Files\Tcl\bin``.) |
| |
| |
| How do I extract the downloaded documentation on Windows? |
| --------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Sometimes, when you download the documentation package to a Windows machine |
| using a web browser, the file extension of the saved file ends up being .EXE. |
| This is a mistake; the extension should be .TGZ. |
| |
| Simply rename the downloaded file to have the .TGZ extension, and WinZip will be |
| able to handle it. (If your copy of WinZip doesn't, get a newer one from |
| http://www.winzip.com.) |
| |
| |
| Missing cw3215mt.dll (or missing cw3215.dll) |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Sometimes, when using Tkinter on Windows, you get an error that cw3215mt.dll or |
| cw3215.dll is missing. |
| |
| Cause: you have an old Tcl/Tk DLL built with cygwin in your path (probably |
| ``C:\Windows``). You must use the Tcl/Tk DLLs from the standard Tcl/Tk |
| installation (Python 1.5.2 comes with one). |
| |
| |
| Warning about CTL3D32 version from installer |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The Python installer issues a warning like this:: |
| |
| This version uses CTL3D32.DLL which is not the correct version. |
| This version is used for windows NT applications only. |
| |
| Tim Peters: |
| |
| This is a Microsoft DLL, and a notorious source of problems. The message |
| means what it says: you have the wrong version of this DLL for your operating |
| system. The Python installation did not cause this -- something else you |
| installed previous to this overwrote the DLL that came with your OS (probably |
| older shareware of some sort, but there's no way to tell now). If you search |
| for "CTL3D32" using any search engine (AltaVista, for example), you'll find |
| hundreds and hundreds of web pages complaining about the same problem with |
| all sorts of installation programs. They'll point you to ways to get the |
| correct version reinstalled on your system (since Python doesn't cause this, |
| we can't fix it). |
| |
| David A Burton has written a little program to fix this. Go to |
| http://www.burtonsys.com/downloads.html and click on "ctl3dfix.zip". |