MCEdit 2.0 can be downloaded from this page, in "Development Versions".
Keep in mind that it's still in development and hasn't re-implemented a lot of features that MCEdit 1.0/Unified has yet.
[ MCEdit 0.1.6 (Build 362) notable changes ]
Fixed:
Graphics: 0125eac1: Update to 1.4.6 terrain.png [Hell yeah!]
Pocket Edition: c40b1481: (#212) New textures and block types.
Setup: 87c34e9c: Change url in setup.py
Updates: c85679ea: Change update URL to bitbucket
Misc:
-- Changes in pymclevel:
Misc:
Downloads for Windows (32 and 64 bits) and Mac OS X available at Here
It sounds like you have Intel HD Graphics.
We just investigated this one the other day. We found the change that caused the problem. I made this special build to see if it's fixable. Try it and let me know how it works.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/zyzlnl25wli4usu/MCEdit_dev-0.1.7build379-1-g4680.win-amd64.zip
http://www.mcedit.net/downloads.html
using the mac version? If so the error seems to be it's not able to run on newer OS's
>error 19:04:27.480242-0700 mcedit AddInstanceForFactory: No factory registered for id <CFUUID 0x1005898a0> F8BB1C28-BAE8-11D6-9C31-00039315CD46
>fault 19:04:27.658673-0700 mcedit This application, or a library it uses, is using the deprecated Component Manager for hosting Audio Components. This is not supported when rebuilding against the 10.16 or later SDK. Also, this makes the host incompatible with version 3 audio units. Please transition to the API's in AudioComponent.h.
i think latest version of mcedit that there currently is is "Dev. build: 0.1.8build799" according to http://www.mcedit.net/ .It says unstable but i havent seen any issues either after countless usess. Mcedit even has no problems with heavily moded minecraft like ftb or tekkit, only thing that may happen is textures are missing/wrong when there are new blocks but its only visual.
Don't really understand the new 2 bug.. C:\build is pyinstaller thing, nothing to worry about. I think the function is using it by mistake, I'll fix it and I added the getTileEntitiesInBox function to there. And for the last question, http://www.tutorialspoint.com/python/python_basic_operators.htm