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List:       pykde
Subject:    Re: PyQt5 v5.15.4 and PyQt6 v6.0.3 Available for Testing
From:       Eric Larson <larson.eric.d () gmail ! com>
Date:       2021-03-09 13:05:32
Message-ID: CAGu2niXzTEBGvKGibvDeFNP5qpzhqNzktvAZYsm+cSxjTeDRoQ () mail ! gmail ! com
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Although this is probably a "no news is good news" situation, I thought I'd
add at least one explicit +1 that it PyQt5 5.15.4 worked for us
<https://github.com/mne-tools/mne-python/pull/9012/files> (tested on Ubuntu
Python 3.9 and Windows Python 3.8) using the instructions for pip.

Eric


On Fri, Mar 5, 2021 at 1:04 PM Phil Thompson <phil@riverbankcomputing.com>
wrote:

> The website now runs a PyPI server which will be used in the future to
> serve wheels of development snapshots and pre-releases of the next
> stable versions (prior to being uploaded to PyPI at python.org).
> Hopefully this will allow more people to test releases before they get
> committed to python.org. This was part of the motivation for breaking
> the Qt libraries out into separate wheels.
>
> Instructions (ie. what flags to pass to pip) can be found here...
>
> https://www.riverbankcomputing.com/pypi/
>
> PyQt5 v5.15.4 and PyQt6 v6.0.3 both get around the problems with the
> previous releases that resulted in a broken installation after doing an
> upgrade (rather than a clean installation). However note that, after
> upgrading to these latest versions, you will have an unused Qt
> installation lying around. To remove it run...
>
> pip uninstall PyQt5-Qt
>
> ...and similar for PyQtWebEngine etc.
>
> Once I've had enough (positive) feedback I'll push the releases to
> python.org.
>
> Phil
>

[Attachment #3 (text/html)]

<div dir="ltr">Although this is probably a &quot;no news is good news&quot; \
situation, I thought I&#39;d add at least one explicit +1 that it PyQt5 5.15.4 <a \
href="https://github.com/mne-tools/mne-python/pull/9012/files">worked for us</a>  \
(tested on Ubuntu Python 3.9 and Windows Python 3.8) using the instructions for \
pip.<div><br></div><div>Eric</div><div><br></div></div><br><div \
class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">On Fri, Mar 5, 2021 at 1:04 PM \
Phil Thompson &lt;<a \
href="mailto:phil@riverbankcomputing.com">phil@riverbankcomputing.com</a>&gt; \
wrote:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px \
0.8ex;border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);padding-left:1ex">The website now runs a \
PyPI server which will be used in the future to <br> serve wheels of development \
snapshots and pre-releases of the next <br> stable versions (prior to being uploaded \
to PyPI at <a href="http://python.org" rel="noreferrer" \
target="_blank">python.org</a>). <br> Hopefully this will allow more people to test \
releases before they get <br> committed to <a href="http://python.org" \
rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">python.org</a>. This was part of the motivation for \
breaking <br> the Qt libraries out into separate wheels.<br>
<br>
Instructions (ie. what flags to pass to pip) can be found here...<br>
<br>
<a href="https://www.riverbankcomputing.com/pypi/" rel="noreferrer" \
target="_blank">https://www.riverbankcomputing.com/pypi/</a><br> <br>
PyQt5 v5.15.4 and PyQt6 v6.0.3 both get around the problems with the <br>
previous releases that resulted in a broken installation after doing an <br>
upgrade (rather than a clean installation). However note that, after <br>
upgrading to these latest versions, you will have an unused Qt <br>
installation lying around. To remove it run...<br>
<br>
pip uninstall PyQt5-Qt<br>
<br>
...and similar for PyQtWebEngine etc.<br>
<br>
Once I&#39;ve had enough (positive) feedback I&#39;ll push the releases to <br>
<a href="http://python.org" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">python.org</a>.<br>
<br>
Phil<br>
</blockquote></div>



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