I really liked the talk. There's a cool approach to all of this, a lot like the py2anything described in the outro, which is the Buildozer tool that we use at Kivy. The idea is to make an easy to use frontend to all platform-specific packaging tools. It's a WIP, but definitely a step in the right direction. Stay tuned :-)
A year ago I spent a day trying to make pyinstaller build a PyQt application for Windows from my GNU/Linux system. It did not work. Did the situation change?
Amen! Great talk. Definitely think this is a part of Python that could improve, but wheels are a step in the right direction.
I really liked the talk. There's a cool approach to all of this, a lot like the py2anything described in the outro, which is the Buildozer tool that we use at Kivy. The idea is to make an easy to use frontend to all platform-specific packaging tools. It's a WIP, but definitely a step in the right direction. Stay tuned :-)
I. Loved. This. Talk. So. Much!
A year ago I spent a day trying to make pyinstaller build a PyQt application for Windows from my GNU/Linux system. It did not work. Did the situation change?
PyInstaller now supports PyQt5.
200MiB of downloads to get anything compiled on Debian/Ubuntu...
Gentoo: batteries included.
Maybe beeware can solve these problems in the future