Taymon's answer addresses your question directly in that IDLE's stdin/stdout are actually file-like objects and not the standard file streams associated with a console/terminal. Moreover, in Windows IDLE runs with pythonw.exe, which doesn't even have an attached win32 console.
That said, if you just need the output from a program to be printed to the user in real time, then in many cases (but not all) you can read the output line by line and echo it accordingly. The following works for me in Windows IDLE. It demonstrates reading from a piped stdout line by line. It also shows what happens if the process buffers the pipe, in which case readline will block until either the buffer is full or the pipe closes. This buffering can be manually disabled with some programs (such as the Python interpreter's -u option), and there are workarounds for Unix such as stdbuf.
test1.py
import sys
import subprocess
def test(cmd):
p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
it = iter(p.stdout.readline, b'')
for line in it:
print(line.rstrip().decode('ascii'))
print('Testing buffered subprocess...')
test([sys.executable, 'test2.py'])
print('\nTesting unbuffered subprocess...')
#-u: unbuffered binary stdout and stderr
test([sys.executable, '-u', 'test2.py'])
test2.py:
import time
for i in range(5):
print(i)
time.sleep(1)
The output in IDLE should be the following, with the first set of digits printed all at once after a delay and the second set printed line by line.
Testing buffered subprocess...
0
1
2
3
4
Testing unbuffered subprocess...
0
1
2
3
4