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Exactly. And in this particular case pyoxidizer and the work that went into it originally in many ways gave birth to parts of it. The python standalone builds were what made me publish Rye because there was something out there that had traction and a dedicated person to make it work.

Prior to it, i had my own version of Rye for myself but I only had Python builds that I made for myself and computers I had. Critical mass is important and all these projects can feed into each other.

Before Rye, uv, and pyoxidizer there was little community demand for the standalone python builds or the concept behind it. That has dramatically changed in the last 24 months and I have seen even commercial companies switch over to these builds. This is important progress and it _will_ greatly help making self contained and redistributable Python programs a reality.




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