It maybe useful to some of the Cocoa developers who deal with the Python code also, as it eases the installation of the PyObjC (a bridge between the Python and Objective-C) later on. It comes with an installer and installs some stuff out of the /usr/local directory which we don’t need. You can download binary distribution from the official Python website (and you are in fact encouraged to do so, if using OS X), which suffers exactly from these kind of problems. This is also the case with Python on Mac OS X. However, binary distributions are often pre-packaged and end up in some sort of installer – they could contain certain things that we dislike and so on. I decided to use the /usr/local directory as destination and compile everything from source.
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