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10:27 PM
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Q: Why can I not create a wheel in python?

Garrett LinuxHere are the commands I am running: Garrett-Berg-Neutral-IO-MacBook-Pro:autoinstall garrettberg$ python setup.py bdist_wheel usage: setup.py [global_opts] cmd1 [cmd1_opts] [cmd2 [cmd2_opts] ...] or: setup.py --help [cmd1 cmd2 ...] or: setup.py --help-commands or: setup.py cmd --help er...

 
What does which python output?
 
/usr/local/bin/python
 
Next: python -V
 
It says Python 3.4.1
As I edited above, I am on a mac (python is from homebrew)
 
And you have installed the wheel package as Thomas' answer advises?
 
10:27 PM
one more question -- do you know how to install a wheel generally?
Right now it is: nioblocks-1.01-cp34-cp34m-macosx_10_9_x86_64.whl
but I know you can make it like: nioblocks-1.3.2-py3-none-any.whl
 
10:41 PM
Wheels are binary distributions.
They are always tied to a specific platform.
Use a source distribution for a platform-agnostic distribution format.
You could try the --universal switch if there is only Python code in your project.
or to target just Python 3, --python-tag py3.
@GarrettLinux: ^
 

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