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Installing wxPython on Ubuntu 12.04

The Issue: I am having trouble installing wxPython on Ubuntu 12.04. I would like to find a simple, straightforward way of doing this.

What I've Done So Far: The most relevant instructions that I have been able to find so far can be found here: http://wiki.wxpython.org/InstallingOnUbuntuOrDebian

The issue with these instructions is that there is no choice available for Precise 12.04. The most up-to-date distro shown is Natty 11.4. From what I can find, the proper way to do this is to manually build debian packages, which is explained here: http://wiki.wxpython.org/BuildingDebianPackages

Upon attempting this and finally typing the command 'fakeroot debian/rules binary', I get the errors:

debian/rules:14: /usr/share/quilt/quilt.make: No such file or directory
pyversions: missing X(S)-Python-Version in control file, fall back to debian/pyversions
pyversions: missing debian/pyversions file, fall back to supported versions
make: *** No rule to make target `/usr/share/quilt/quilt.make'. Stop.

I cannot seem to fix this error, or find any other applicable resources that work for me. I would post more links here, but since I am new, the spam filter is blocking me from doing so.

Conclusion: Does someone know a simple solution to properly installing wxPython on Ubuntu 12.04 Precise?

Update: I tried just simply using the apt-get command 'sudo apt-get install python-wxgtk2.8', and I received this (which seems good):

Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree

Reading state information... Done
python-wxgtk2.8 is already the newest version.
The following packages were automatically installed and are no longer required:
language-pack-zh-hans yaml-cpp language-pack-kde-en language-pack-kde-zh-hans language-pack-kde-en-base language-pack-zh-hans-base language-pack-kde-zh-hans-base
Use 'apt-get autoremove' to remove them.
0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 173 not upgraded.

But once I attempt to run something, ie 'python test_gui.py', I get the following error:

Traceback (most recent call last):
File "test_gui.py", line 1, in
import wx
ImportError: No module named wx

like image 466
John Zeller Avatar asked Dec 22 '12 23:12

John Zeller


4 Answers

Okay. So I have figured out a way out Just run the following command in a Terminal:

sudo apt-get install python-wxgtk2.8 python-wxtools wx2.8-doc wx2.8-examples wx2.8-headers wx2.8-i18n

And Voila! It works!

like image 181
Brut3e Avatar answered Oct 05 '22 12:10

Brut3e


Okay, so I was able to figure it out. It turned out to be a combination of things.

  1. First make sure that you have Python installed
  2. Install wxGTK 2.8 with the command, sudo apt-get install python-wxgtk2.8
  3. Run the command, apt-get source -d wxwidgets2.8
  4. Now run, dpkg-source -x wxwidgets2.8_2.8.12.1-6ubuntu2.dsc
  5. cd wxwidgets2.8-2.8.12.1
  6. cd wxPython
  7. Now run the command, sudo python setup.py install
  8. wxPython and wxWidgets are now successfully installed!
like image 23
John Zeller Avatar answered Oct 05 '22 12:10

John Zeller


sudo apt-get install python-wxgtk2.8 python-wxtools wx2.8-i18n libwxgtk2.8-dev libgtk2.0-dev Works for me

source:http://wiki.wxpython.org/InstallingOnUbuntuOrDebian

like image 9
dev-seahouse Avatar answered Oct 05 '22 13:10

dev-seahouse


You can also install it with Pip, but with a slight modification to the install command.

From the wxPython website:

Because of the differences between Linux distributions (mainly different versions of the core libraries installed by default, but also platform architecture and etc.) it is not possible to host binary wheel files for Linux on PyPI unless they can be made to work within the constraints of PEP 513 Unfortunately, attempts to pound the wxPython peg into the manylinux1 hole have not been very successful. Maybe manylinux2 will be a better fit. In the meantime, if you have a Linux similar enough to those used to build the wheels located under the wxPython Extras linux folder, then you can use them and not need to build the wheels yourself.

Since there are various options for distro and wx port (GTK2 or GTK3) then the files can not all be located in the same folder for easy access by pip. This simply just means that you'll need to drill down a little further to find the URL to give to pip. For example, to get the GTK3 wxPython builds for Ubuntu 16.04 (and 16.10, LinuxMint 18, and probably others) you can use a pip command like this:

pip install -U -f https://extras.wxpython.org/wxPython4/extras/linux/gtk3/ubuntu-16.04 wxPython
like image 3
smac89 Avatar answered Oct 05 '22 12:10

smac89