Reading this:
http://guide.python-distribute.org/creation.html
it tells me to include doc/txt files and .py files are excluded in MANIFEST.in file
Reading this:
https://docs.python.org/2/distutils/sourcedist.html#manifest-template
It tells me only sdist uses MANIFEST.in and only includes file ...
@Soviero There is a way, indeed (to setup users and tables). I was on a team that used this before. But I can't remember the commands off the top of my head. You should be able to find it with some searching, though
We use regex to get the version from the Python package. And open the requirements file as well. So you could put a subprocess command in there to run a MySQL command.
@Soviero I think it's acceptable, you're setting up your package after all. You don't want to modify too much though, or do anything that a user wouldn't reasonably expect it to do.
@Ffisegydd I want to do something akin to how Zimbra does it. Where I have a directory in /opt with my own web server, packages, etc. Leaving as few OS level deps as possible. (I know the OS package manager is there for a reason, but enterprises are weird about that.)
@Ffisegydd If the user running it is root, doesn't it run as root?
In Python, we can do:
'a' * 4
to get 'aaaa'.
We can not do:
'a' + 4
We first have to cast 4 to a string.
Is this just an arbitrary choice to overload * with a definition for a String and Int arg, and to not overload + for a String and Int?
I'm trying to understand how this fits into Pyt...
If I try to do the following:
things = 5
print("You have " + things + " things.")
I get the following error in Python 3.x:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: Can't convert 'int' object to str implicitly
... and a similar error in Python 2.x:
...