I'm running Python 2.7 on Windows 7 64-bit, and when I run the installer for setuptools it tells me that Python 2.7 is not installed. The specific error message is:
`Python Version 2.7 required which was not found in the registry`
My installed version of Python is:
`Python 2.7 (r27:82525, Jul 4 2010, 07:43:08) [MSC v.1500 64 bit (AMD64)] on win32`
I'm looking at the setuptools site and it doesn't mention any installers for 64-bit Windows. Have I missed something or do I have to install this from source?
Problem: you have 64-bit Python, and a 32-bit installer. This will cause problems for extension modules.
The reasons why the installer doesn't finds Python is the transparent 32-bit emulation from Windows 7. 64-bit and 32-bit programs will write to different parts of the Windows registry.
64-bit: HKLM|HKCU\SOFTWARE\
32-bit: HKLM|HKCU\SOFTWARE\wow6432node\
.
This means that the 64-bit Python installer writes to HKLM\SOFTWARE\Python
, but the 32-bit setuptools installer looks at HKLM\SOFTWARE\wow6432node\Python
(this is handled by windows automatically, programs don't notice). This is expected behavior and not a bug.
Usually, you have these choices:
HKLM\SOFTWARE\Python
to HKLM\SOFTWARE\wow6432node\Python
, but this will cause problems with binary distributions, as 64-bit Python can't load 32-bit compiled modules (do NOT do this!)For setuptools itself, for example, you can't use a 32-bit installer for 64-bit Python as it includes binary files. But there's a 64-bit installer at http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/ (has many installers for other modules too). Nowadays, many packages on PyPi have binary distributions, so you can install them via pip.