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Me on Twitter

  • #GooglePlay policy has changed "Ads must not simulate or impersonate system notifications or warnings." Cool ! http://t.co/Pyp1RgSk 12 years 5 weeks ago
  • IOS leads over Android as far as which 1 will win in enterprise marketplace - according to Appcelerator's may report http://t.co/zytDfOEF 12 years 5 weeks ago
  • Cannot simply ignore a file that's already in SVN control. Never bothered looking why. Old tool SVN... http://t.co/dkKO3eiP 12 years 6 weeks ago
  • "Good grammar is credibility, especially on the internet. [...] They are a projection of you in your physical absence." http://t.co/mJv0dUtb 12 years 6 weeks ago
  • @TheBrousse ok. Chapeau bas ! Cc @CedN 12 years 6 weeks ago
  • @TheBrousse au fait on peut savoir ce que fera cette appli ? cc @CedN 12 years 6 weeks ago
  • Tonight's @ParisAndroidUG : apps gain permissions of other apps in the same process 12 years 6 weeks ago
  • @TheBrousse ok. Bon a savoir ! 12 years 6 weeks ago
  • @TheBrousse bien dormi ? :-) c'est fait avec les api android ou titanium ? 12 years 6 weeks ago
  • #AddThis widget in #Firefox3D : #Google+ has a bigger one ;-) http://t.co/3eISv0rv 12 years 6 weeks ago

distutils

python Building PyCrypto for Win32

The PyCrypto library provides Python with implementation for a lot of algorithms for cryptography. It's very useful.

Ubuntu has it by default but if you want to have it for Python 3.2 on Windows, you must use Active Python, as there is no other binary release for Python 3.2 on the web.

In case you want to use the official Python distribution or if ActiveState did not (yet) released a PyCrypto for the version of Python you are using, this article might help you by putting together the steps to build it from source.

Also attached : a binary exe for the impatients.

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