"Albert Strasheim" <fullung at gmail.com> wrote: > As part of the Windows Vista release, Microsoft have created the "Windows > SDK" that looks like Platform SDK on steroids. It includes 32-bit and 64-bit > libraries and compilers, debugging tools, etc. and supports Windows XP, > Windows Server 2003 and Windows Vista. Possibly not being able to run the compiler on Windows 2000 (or ME/98/95) in a "supported" mode may be a deal killer for people to not switch (and stick with the Platform SDK or Visual Studio 2003). I also wonder if the results of the compilations are usable on Windows 2000 (or ME/98/95). > I'm only guessing here, but I think the Windows SDK is probably going to > become the de facto standard for building software on Windows in the absence > of Visual Studio. Has anybody else looked at the Windows SDK yet? Any > thoughts on what needs to be done with distutils so that the Windows SDK can > be supported in Python 2.6? Someone will have to add/update a visual studio project file equivalent in the PCBuild directory. I think it would be nice if the person who updates the PCBuild stuff also tried to find someone with other Windows platforms (64 bit, win2k, possibly the 95/98/ME family). - Josiah
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