[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks for the response. However, I continue to have problems. Allow me
to give some more detail.
For simplicity of testing, I hard coded the classpath and JVM path
(BTW getDefaultJVMPath() returns None on my system)
import os, os.path
from jpype import *
startJVM("C:/jdk1.
Thanks for the response. However, I continue to have problems. Allow me
to give some more detail.
For simplicity of testing, I hard coded the classpath and JVM path
(BTW getDefaultJVMPath() returns None on my system)
import os, os.path
from jpype import *
startJVM("C:/jdk1.5.0/jre/bin/client/jvm
> I am curious to know what makes your Jython code incompatible with
> CPython. If it is only because it uses Java classes, it might
> not be too
> difficult to port them to CPython+Jpype.
CPython+Jpype may indeed be the way to go in the long run - it's only my
ignorance stoping me at this point :
Jim Hargrave wrote:
Sorry - should have given more detail. That's what I get for posting at
1:00AM.
What I want to do us write scripts in CPython that access Windows
ActiveX such as Word and IE. Obviously Jython can't do this (easily at
least). I also have Jython scripts that provide a high le
While we are on topic, I am having some trouble understanding JPype
classpath. How do I init the JVM with the folder in which the Python
program is located included in the classpath?
I tried
t = JPackage('.').test
That did not work.
My environment variable includes current folder in the classpath
I
Sorry - should have given more detail. That's what I get for posting at
1:00AM.
What I want to do us write scripts in CPython that access Windows
ActiveX such as Word and IE. Obviously Jython can't do this (easily at
least). I also have Jython scripts that provide a high level layer on
top of
> As for using JPype ... well it depends on what you want to script. if
> you Java code is the main app, I'd eschew CPython completely and use
> Jython to script. If you main app is in Python, and the Java code is
> "simply" libraries you wish to use, then I'f go with CPython + Jpype.
It
> is very
Jim Hargrave wrote:
I've read that it is possible to compile jython to native code using
GCJ. PyLucene uses this approach, they then use SWIG to create a Python
wrapper around the natively compiled (java) Lucene. Has this been done
before for with jython?
Another approach would be to use JPype
I've read that it is possible to compile jython to native code using
GCJ. PyLucene uses this approach, they then use SWIG to create a Python
wrapper around the natively compiled (java) Lucene. Has this been done
before for with jython?
Another approach would be to use JPype to call the jython j