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setup.py
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setup.py
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#!/usr/bin/env python
"""A setuptools based setup module.
See:
https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/distributing.html
https://github.com/pypa/sampleproject
"""
# Always prefer setuptools over distutils
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
# To use a consistent encoding
from os import path
here = path.abspath(path.dirname(__file__))
# Get the long description from the relevant file
#with open(path.join(here, 'DESCRIPTION.rst'), encoding='utf-8') as f:
# long_description = f.read()
print find_packages(exclude=['contrib', 'docs', 'tests*'])
setup(
name='twitter_dm',
# Versions should comply with PEP440. For a discussion on single-sourcing
# the version across setup.py and the project code, see
# https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/single_source_version.html
version='1.0.1',
description='A suite of libraries for collecting and processing Twitter data. Also includes a base class that can be used to run things on hadoop using mrjob',
long_description='',
# The project's main homepage.
url='https://github.com/kennyjoseph/twitter_dm',
# Author details
author='Kenneth Joseph',
author_email='josephkena@gmail.com',
# Choose your license
license='MIT',
# You can just specify the packages manually here if your project is
# simple. Or you can use find_packages().
packages=['twitter_dm','twitter_dm.nlp','twitter_dm.multiprocess','twitter_dm.utility'],
# List run-time dependencies here. These will be installed by pip when
# your project is installed. For an analysis of "install_requires" vs pip's
# requirements files see:
# https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/requirements.html
install_requires=['requests', 'ujson', 'rauth', 'langid', 'nltk', 'openpyxl', 'regex', 'inflect', 'arrow'],
# List additional groups of dependencies here (e.g. development
# dependencies). You can install these using the following syntax,
# for example:
# $ pip install -e .[dev,test]
#extras_require={
# 'dev': ['check-manifest'],
# 'test': ['coverage'],
#},
# If there are data files included in your packages that need to be
# installed, specify them here. If using Python 2.6 or less, then these
# have to be included in MANIFEST.in as well.
package_data={
'twitter_dm': ['data/stopwords.txt']
},
# Although 'package_data' is the preferred approach, in some case you may
# need to place data files outside of your packages. See:
# http://docs.python.org/3.4/distutils/setupscript.html#installing-additional-files # noqa
# In this case, 'data_file' will be installed into '<sys.prefix>/my_data'
#data_files=[('my_data', ['data/data_file'])],
#scripts=["examples/collect_tweets.py","examples/get_user_info_in_chunks.py"]
# To provide executable scripts, use entry points in preference to the
# "scripts" keyword. Entry points provide cross-platform support and allow
# pip to create the appropriate form of executable for the target platform.
#entry_points={
# 'console_scripts': [
# 'sample=sample:main',
# ],
#},
)