#
# source file of the GNU LilyPond music typesetter
#
-# (c) 1998--2007 Han-Wen Nienhuys <hanwen@xs4all.nl>
+# (c) 1998--2008 Han-Wen Nienhuys <hanwen@xs4all.nl>
# Jan Nieuwenhuizen <janneke@gnu.org>
import __main__
import os
import re
import shutil
-import string
import sys
import optparse
# Users of python modules should include this snippet
# and customize variables below.
-# We'll suffer this path init stuff as long as we don't install our
-# python packages in <prefix>/lib/pythonx.y (and don't kludge around
-# it as we do with teTeX on Red Hat Linux: set some environment var
-# (PYTHONPATH) in profile)
-
-# If set, LILYPOND_DATADIR must take prevalence
-# if datadir is not set, we're doing a build and LILYPOND_DATADIR
-
-datadir = '@local_lilypond_datadir@'
-if not os.path.isdir (datadir):
- datadir = '@lilypond_datadir@'
-if os.environ.has_key ('LILYPOND_DATADIR') :
- datadir = os.environ['LILYPOND_DATADIR']
- while datadir[-1] == os.sep:
- datadir= datadir[:-1]
-
-sys.path.insert (0, os.path.join (datadir, 'python'))
-
# Python 2.5 only accepts strings with proper Python internal encoding
# (i.e. ASCII or Unicode) when writing to stdout/stderr, so we must
return s
underscore = _
+# Urg, Python 2.4 does not define stderr/stdout encoding
+# Maybe guess encoding from LANG/LC_ALL/LC_CTYPE?
+
def encoded_write(f, s):
- f.write (s.encode (f.encoding))
+ f.write (s.encode (f.encoding or 'utf_8'))
+
+# ugh, Python 2.5 optparse requires Unicode strings in some argument
+# functions, and refuse them in some other places
+def display_encode (s):
+ return s.encode (sys.stderr.encoding or 'utf_8')
def stderr_write (s):
encoded_write (sys.stderr, s)
progress = stderr_write
+def require_python_version ():
+ if sys.hexversion < 0x02040000:
+ stderr_write ("Python 2.4 or newer is required to run this program.\n\
+Please upgrade Python from http://python.org/download/, and if you use MacOS X,\n\
+please read 'Setup for MacOS X' in Application Usage.")
+ os.system ("open http://python.org/download/")
+ sys.exit (2)
+
# Modified version of the commands.mkarg(x), which always uses
# double quotes (since Windows can't handle the single quotes:
def mkarg(x):
def search_exe_path (name):
p = os.environ['PATH']
- exe_paths = string.split (p, ':')
+ exe_paths = p.split (':')
for e in exe_paths:
full = os.path.join (e, name)
if os.path.exists (full):