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I am trying to install pywin32. I downloaded it from sourceforge.net. When I run

setup.py install

it shows "Unable to find vcvarsall.bat". I Googled about it and found that I have to install MinGW and set path then run

python setup.py build --compiler=mingw32

but it's showing

Can't find a version in Windows.h

Can anybody help? (I have a trial version of Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate installed and MinGW C and C++ compiler installed. Operating system: Windows 7.)

Can anybody tell me a source from where I can download Python binaries already compiled in MinGW, so I don't have to do all this. Or if I can get a python which already have Windows modules.

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5 Answers 5

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You can install pywin32 wheel packages from PYPI with PIP by pointing to this package: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pypiwin32 No need to worry about first downloading the package, just use pip:

pip install pypiwin32

Currently I think this is "the easiest" way to get in working.

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  • 4
    It's nice that it could be installed just like that. But try writing a Windows service and running it using virtual env - no good until you make DLLs from pypiwin32_system32 visible for the system. Running pywin32_postinstall.py won't work either, as it looks for DLLs in pywin32_system32 (without pi in the middle). Going with @jpmc26's answer works better in that case. Here's a link to a not so popular question, but a very useful one, about that issue: stackoverflow.com/a/34942168/279806
    – kishkin
    Jun 30, 2016 at 19:16
  • pip is easiest way to install python libraries.(on any platform)
    – BladeMight
    Oct 11, 2016 at 19:07
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    Doesn't seem to work on python 3.6 (worked on 3.5)
    – Rehan
    Jul 5, 2017 at 17:34
  • 3
    I think the correct command on windows should be: python -m pip install pypiwin32 (pip is not necessarily in the path) Jul 11, 2017 at 15:43
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    Per github.com/mhammond/pywin32/issues/1151#issuecomment-360563280, I think you should now be using pywin32, not pypiwin32, and that this has been the case since at least early 2018. Are you able to test and then update this answer accordingly?
    – Mark Amery
    Jul 3, 2019 at 9:47
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are you just trying to install it, or are you looking to build from source?

If you just need to install, the easiest way is to use the MSI installers provided here:

http://sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/files/pywin32/ (for updated versions)

make sure you get the correct version (matches Python version, 32bit/64bit, etc)

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I disagree with the accepted answer being "the easiest", particularly if you want to use virtualenv.

You can use the Unofficial Windows Binaries instead. Download the appropriate wheel from there, and install it with pip:

pip install pywin32-219-cp27-none-win32.whl

(Make sure you pick the one for the right version and bitness of Python).

You might be able to get the URL and install it via pip without downloading it first, but they're made it a bit harder to just grab the URL. Probably better to download it and host it somewhere yourself.

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  • upvoted. note however, the original answer is 5 years old, before .whl format was in use :) Jan 30, 2016 at 14:04
  • @CoreyGoldberg True, but even before wheel, you could actually do something similar with the binary eggs: easy_install pywin32-216.win32-py2.7.exe. The advantages being that you can script this and that it supports virtualenv. Maybe not 5 years ago, but for several years (at least 3 or 4).
    – jpmc26
    Jan 30, 2016 at 18:33
  • fair enough... But I'm curious why you point to the "unofficial windiows binaries"? AFAICT, you can pip install from the .whl files host in my original answer. However they haven't been updated for build 220 (whereas the binaries on the unofficial build site has been updated). I was going to update my answer for modern pip tooling, but want to point to a freshly updated build. (FWIW I haven't used Windows since before this answer was even posted :) Jan 31, 2016 at 4:19
  • @CoreyGoldberg ? I don't see any wheels on SourceForge where you linked. Only the binary egg executables. The unofficial site provides wheels for a plethora of Python libraries. My experience has generally be very good with them. They do a very good job of packaging everything you need to get something up and running, even when official packages tell you to install something separately. So they tend to be my go-to for Windows binaries for Python. They may lag behind a little, but they'll catch up fairly soon.
    – jpmc26
    Jan 31, 2016 at 5:28
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    you are right. official builds are not published on PyPI at all. The package name is just registed on PyPI, and links to a sourceforge url where .exe updates are actually published: sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/files If this is actually a project that is in high use, it should really move to modern dev hosting, with a modern DVCS, issue tracking, and a sane release mecahnism that uploads to PyPI. If I had any interest, I would offer to help, but I really don't. perhaps someone should nudge the maintainer (Mark Hammond) to see what his plans are and if he needs a hand. Jan 31, 2016 at 20:24
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I had the exact same problem. The problem was that Anaconda had not registered Python in the windows registry.

1) pip install pywin
2) execute this script to register Python in the windows registry
3) download the appropriate package form Corey Goldberg's answer and python will be detected

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Quoting the README at https://github.com/mhammond/pywin32:

By far the easiest way to use pywin32 is to grab binaries from the most recent release

Just download the installer for your version of Python from https://github.com/mhammond/pywin32/releases and run it, and you're done.

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