Hi. On 19.3.2014. 16:38, "Martin v. Löwis" wrote: > Am 17.03.14 22:10, schrieb Jurko Gospodnetić: >> Fixing >> this required manually cleaning up leftover CPython 3.4.0rc3 windows >> installer registry entries. Note that the issue could not be fixed by >> using the CPython 3.4.0rc3 installer as it failed due to the same problem. > > Did you try the 3.4.0rc3 "repair" installation? That should have > undeleted (repaired) the files that you had manually deleted. I tried different things back then, and I'm 90% sure I tried that one as well. Unfortunately, my brain is already trying to block out that painful afternoon so I can't tell you for certain. :-) But, all kidding aside, I'll try to reproduce the issue again and let you know the exact details. >> Should I open a 'Add/Remove Programs' dialog related issue in the >> CPython issue tracker? > > Please do. It would also good if somebody volunteered to reproduce > the issue. Will do. FYI, I did reproduce the 'Add/Remove Programs' dialog issue on another PC in the mean time. Also Windows 7 x64 though. Unfortunately, I don't have other 64-bit OSs readily available at the moment. >> And possibly a separate one for making CPython >> installations not fail without possible recovery if a previous CPython >> installation has already been removed? > > Please don't. Or, at least, make it more specific. If you have manually > corrupted your Python installation (by deleting essential files), you > have to accept that the system installation procedures will fail. > > It might be possible to recover from the loss of a specific such file; > for that, we would have to identify what the file is. However, the > standard procedure should be to repair the installation before > attempting an upgrade. Ok, as I stated above, I'll get back to you on this once I reproduce the 'corruption' issue again. Oh, and many thanks for replying! :-) Best regards, Jurko Gospodnetić
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