This is driving me completely nuts. I have looked at several answers to questions relating to this, but when I try the solutions non works.
First I tried a simple
pip install python-Levenshtein. This
this produced a lot of spam ending with Unable to find vcvarsall.batSearching on that suggested I need to install Visual C++ 10.0; but when I tried that it errored out as apparently I already have a newer version installed.
Then I found answers based on something called 'wheel'. This page python libs lists 8 .whl files for this module with NO explanation as to what each one is for. I tried the first two and got the same response on each: ...whl is not a supported wheel on this platform
What I need is simple directions, that the proverbial small child could understand, as to how to install this module.
I am running Python 3.3, on a Win 7 64 bit machine. (I also have Python 2.7 and 2.4 installed but those are for other projects). I do not use C++ directly for anything so have no knowledge of how its installed on my machine, I imagine it was either part of the OS or came with Python or some other package. It seems to me that a Python module that relies on a C++ runtime would require the user to have any knowledge of C++ and would be completely 'self-contained'. So, what am I missing?