From 64340aae83ed4c929b53b067fc8d9c2860da1c0e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Dpeta <69427753+Dpeta@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Sun, 4 Oct 2020 13:26:30 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Delete setup-py2exe.py This seems to just be a sample file --- setup-py2exe.py | 174 ------------------------------------------------ 1 file changed, 174 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 setup-py2exe.py diff --git a/setup-py2exe.py b/setup-py2exe.py deleted file mode 100644 index 2415bf1..0000000 --- a/setup-py2exe.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,174 +0,0 @@ -# ======================================================# -# File automagically generated by GUI2Exe version 0.3 -# Andrea Gavana, 01 April 2007 -# ======================================================# - -# Let's start with some default (for me) imports... - -from distutils.core import setup -import py2exe -import glob -import os -import zlib -import shutil - -# Remove the build folder -shutil.rmtree("build", ignore_errors=True) - -# do the same for dist folder -shutil.rmtree("dist", ignore_errors=True) - -MANIFEST_TEMPLATE = """ - - - - %(prog)s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -""" - -class Target(object): - """ A simple class that holds information on our executable file. """ - def __init__(self, **kw): - """ Default class constructor. Update as you need. """ - self.__dict__.update(kw) - - -# Ok, let's explain why I am doing that. -# Often, data_files, excludes and dll_excludes (but also resources) -# can be very long list of things, and this will clutter too much -# the setup call at the end of this file. So, I put all the big lists -# here and I wrap them using the textwrap module. - -data_files = [] - -includes = [] -excludes = ['_gtkagg', '_tkagg', 'bsddb', 'curses', 'email', 'pywin.debugger', - 'pywin.debugger.dbgcon', 'pywin.dialogs', 'tcl', - 'Tkconstants', 'Tkinter'] -packages = [] -dll_excludes = ['libgdk-win32-2.0-0.dll', 'libgobject-2.0-0.dll', 'tcl84.dll', - 'tk84.dll', - 'MSVCP90.dll', 'mswsock.dll', 'powrprof.dll'] -icon_resources = [] -bitmap_resources = [] -other_resources = [] -other_resources = [(24, 1, MANIFEST_TEMPLATE % dict(prog="MyAppName"))] - - -# This is a place where the user custom code may go. You can do almost -# whatever you want, even modify the data_files, includes and friends -# here as long as they have the same variable name that the setup call -# below is expecting. - - -# -# The following will copy the MSVC run time dll's -# (msvcm90.dll, msvcp90.dll and msvcr90.dll) and -# the Microsoft.VC90.CRT.manifest which I keep in the -# "Py26MSdlls" folder to the dist folder -# -# depending on wx widgets you use, you might need to add -# gdiplus.dll to the above collection - -py26MSdll = glob.glob(r"c:\Dev\Py26MSdlls-9.0.21022.8\msvc\*.*") - -# install the MSVC 9 runtime dll's into the application folder -data_files += [("", py26MSdll),] - -# I found on some systems one has to put them into sub-folders. -##data_files += [("Microsoft.VC90.CRT", py26MSdll), -## ("lib\Microsoft.VC90.CRT", py26MSdll)] - - - -# Ok, now we are going to build our target class. -# I chose this building strategy as it works perfectly for me :-D - - -GUI2Exe_Target_1 = Target( - # what to build - script = "test.py", - icon_resources = icon_resources, - bitmap_resources = bitmap_resources, - other_resources = other_resources, - dest_base = "test", - version = "0.1", - company_name = "No Company", - copyright = "No Copyrights", - name = "Py2Exe Sample File" - ) - - - -# That's serious now: we have all (or almost all) the options py2exe -# supports. I put them all even if some of them are usually defaulted -# and not used. Some of them I didn't even know about. - -setup( - - data_files = data_files, - - options = {"py2exe": {"compressed": 2, - "optimize": 2, - "includes": includes, - "excludes": excludes, - "packages": packages, - "dll_excludes": dll_excludes, - "bundle_files": 2, - "dist_dir": "dist", - "xref": False, - "skip_archive": False, - "ascii": False, - "custom_boot_script": '', - } - }, - - zipfile = "lib\library.zip", - console = [], - windows = [GUI2Exe_Target_1] - ) - -# This is a place where any post-compile code may go. -# You can add as much code as you want, which can be used, for example, -# to clean up your folders or to do some particular post-compilation -# actions. - -# And we are done. That's a setup script :-D