At 05:03 AM 10/29/2007, bhaaluu wrote: >On 10/29/07, Dick Moores <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Seems I should clarify that. I'm not looking for a script that echoes > > the key pressed. So I'll change that last line to "Could you show a > > script using it that, say, prints "Hello" if '1' is pressed and > > "Bye" if '2' is, AND uses > > <http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/134892> > > Dick > ># tty-example-2.py ># Tue Oct 19 09:07:14 CEST 1999 ># Fredrik Lundh fredrik at pythonware.com ># http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/1999-October/014151.html >import sys > >try: > # windows or dos > import msvcrt > getkey = msvcrt.getch >except ImportError: > # assume unix > import tty, termios > > print dir(termios) > > def getkey(): > file = sys.stdin.fileno() > mode = termios.tcgetattr(file) > try: > tty.setraw(file, termios.TCSANOW) > ch = sys.stdin.read(1) > finally: > termios.tcsetattr(file, termios.TCSANOW, mode) > return ch > >print "press 'q/p/r/s' to quit..." > >while 1: > ch = getkey() > if ch == "q": > break > elif ch == "1": > print "Hello", > elif ch == "2": > print "Bye", > print ch, > >print > > >Like that?
Thanks! I modified it slightly: <http://www.rcblue.com/Python/toTestOnUnix.py>. Could a unix/linux user see if it works? Dick _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor