I’m writing a simple alarm utility in Python.
#!/usr/bin/python
import time
import subprocess
import sys
alarm1 = int(raw_input("How many minutes (alarm1)? "))
while (1):
time.sleep(60*alarm1)
print "Alarm1"
sys.stdout.flush()
doit = raw_input("Continue (Y/N)?[Y]: ")
print "Input",doit
if doit == 'N' or doit=='n':
print "Exiting....."
break
I want to flush or discard all the key strokes that were entered while the script was sleeping and only accept the key strokes after the raw_input() is executed.
I’m running this on Windows XP.
Answers:
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Method 1
From Rosetta Code
def flush_input():
try:
import msvcrt
while msvcrt.kbhit():
msvcrt.getch()
except ImportError:
import sys, termios #for linux/unix
termios.tcflush(sys.stdin, termios.TCIOFLUSH)
The try part is for Windows platform. I have not personally tested this part. But the except section works on linux terminal. termios module has some terminal interface functions. the tcflush can flush input or output buffered data. This part definitely works in my tests.
Method 2
It would help to know what operating system you’re using, as this is a very operating-system-specific question. For example, Kylar’s answer doesn’t work on Windows because sys.stdin doesn’t have a fileno attribute.
I was curious and threw together a solution using curses, but this won’t work on Windows either:
#!/usr/bin/python
import time
import sys
import curses
def alarmloop(stdscr):
stdscr.addstr("How many seconds (alarm1)? ")
curses.echo()
alarm1 = int(stdscr.getstr())
while (1):
time.sleep(alarm1)
curses.flushinp()
stdscr.clear()
stdscr.addstr("Alarm1n")
stdscr.addstr("Continue (Y/N)?[Y]:")
doit = stdscr.getch()
stdscr.addstr("n")
stdscr.addstr("Input "+chr(doit)+"n")
stdscr.refresh()
if doit == ord('N') or doit == ord('n'):
stdscr.addstr("Exiting.....n")
break
curses.wrapper(alarmloop)
EDIT: ah, Windows. Then you can use the msvcrt module. Note that the code below isn’t perfect, and it doesn’t work in IDLE at all:
#!/usr/bin/python
import time
import subprocess
import sys
import msvcrt
alarm1 = int(raw_input("How many seconds (alarm1)? "))
while (1):
time.sleep(alarm1)
print "Alarm1"
sys.stdout.flush()
# Try to flush the buffer
while msvcrt.kbhit():
msvcrt.getch()
print "Continue (Y/N)?[Y]"
doit = msvcrt.getch()
print "Input",doit
if doit == 'N' or doit=='n':
print "Exiting....."
break
Method 3
On Unices, you can use termios.tcflush():
import time
import subprocess
import sys
from termios import tcflush, TCIOFLUSH
alarm1 = int(raw_input("How many minutes (alarm1)? "))
while (1):
time.sleep(60*alarm1)
print "Alarm1"
sys.stdout.flush();
tcflush(sys.stdin, TCIOFLUSH)
doit = raw_input("Continue (Y/N)?[Y]: ")
print "Input",doit
if doit == 'N' or doit=='n':
print "Exiting....."
break
Method 4
#!/usr/bin/python
import time
import subprocess
import sys
import os, select
alarm1 = int(raw_input("How many minutes (alarm1)? "))
while (1):
time.sleep(3*alarm1)
print "Alarm1"
sys.stdout.flush()
while select.select([sys.stdin.fileno()], [], [], 0.0)[0]:
os.read(sys.stdin.fileno(), 4096)
doit = raw_input("Continue (Y/N)?[Y]: ")
print "Input",doit
if doit == 'N' or doit=='n':
print "Exiting....."
break
All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0