If you want to try Rpy-0.3 on OS X there is a nice example of overkill on http://gifi.stat.ucla.edu/pub This has macpython-2.3.tar.gz which includes pyobjc, Numeric, numarray, wxPython, and Rpy, all in a framework build. You can do python from the command line, from pythonIDE or IDLE, or from pycrust and pyshell using wxPython. Then you can load Rpy, make sure there is an X server running, and do R and R graphics from python. The file is more than 30MB (most of it is wxPython). This means you can also do Cocoa and wxWindows programming from this Python build. For those who are interested, the site also contains recent builds of gcc-3.3 and Emacs-21.3.50 and xfree86-4.2.99.3 (CVS build with hardware GLX support). === Jan de Leeuw; Professor and Chair, UCLA Department of Statistics; Editor: Journal of Multivariate Analysis, Journal of Statistical Software US mail: 9432 Boelter Hall, Box 951554, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1554 phone (310)-825-9550; fax (310)-206-5658; email: deleeuw@stat.ucla.edu homepage: http://gifi.stat.ucla.edu ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------- No matter where you go, there you are. --- Buckaroo Banzai http://gifi.stat.ucla.edu/sounds/nomatter.au ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -------------------------
Rpy-0.3 with framework MacPython-2.3
1 message · Jan de Leeuw