How do you clear the screen in shell?
I've seen ways like:
import os
os.system('cls')
This just opens the Windows cmd, clears the screen and closes but I want the shell window to be cleared.
I'm using version 3.3.2 of Python.
import os
os.system('cls') # For Windows
os.system('clear') # For Linux/OS X
os.system('clear')
for Mac OS X terminals (confirmed to work with the default shell, bash
, and also for csh
).
For macOS/OS X, you can use the subprocess module and call 'cls' from the shell:
import subprocess as sp
sp.call('cls', shell=True)
To prevent '0' from showing on top of the window, replace the 2nd line with:
tmp = sp.call('cls', shell=True)
For Linux, you must replace cls
command with clear
tmp = sp.call('clear', shell=True)
import subprocess as sp sp.call('clear',shell=True)
which works, except there is a 0
at the top of the terminal window.
Apr 6, 2014 at 3:43
sp.call('cls', shell=True);
Apr 18, 2017 at 14:44
Here are some options that you can use on Windows
The first option:
import os
cls = lambda: os.system('cls')
>>> cls()
The second option:
cls = lambda: print('\n' * 100)
>>> cls()
The third option if you are in the Python REPL window:
Ctrl + L
The sort of thing that you are looking for is to be found in the curses module.
I.e.,
import curses # Get the module
stdscr = curses.initscr() # Initialise it
stdscr.clear() # Clear the screen
The important thing to remember is before any exit, you need to reset the terminal to a normal mode. This can be done with the following lines:
curses.nocbreak()
stdscr.keypad(0)
curses.echo()
curses.endwin()
If you don't, you will get all sort of strange behaviour. To ensure that this is always done, I would suggest using the atexit module. Something like:
import atexit
@atexit.register
def goodbye():
""" Reset terminal from curses mode on exit """
curses.nocbreak()
if stdscr:
stdscr.keypad(0)
curses.echo()
curses.endwin()
It will probably do nicely.
stdscr = curses.initscr()
works to clear the screen, and the stdscr.clear()
does nothing. Using Python3.4, the stdscr = curses.initscr()
does clear the screen, but takes away the terminal's ability to process newlines. When I press enter repeatedly, it gives the following: >>> >>> >>> >>>
and so on. I can still type commands, but they don't show up. Also, this behavior persists even when I exit()
Python. AVOID USE!
curses
module might have compatibility issues (Windows vs. Mac vs. Linux)? I can confirm that this issue happens on two different Mac terminals, at least. The behavior persists in BASH but not CSH. Hmm.... Do you think I should contact the curses developer, the shell developer, or just ask the SO community? Thanks again!
In addition to being an all-around great CLI library, click
also provides a platform-agnostic clear()
function:
import click
click.clear()
This function works in any OS (Unix, Linux, macOS, and Windows)
Python 2 and Python 3
import platform # For getting the operating system name
import subprocess # For executing a shell command
def clear_screen():
"""
Clears the terminal screen.
"""
# The clear command, as function of the OS
command = "cls" if platform.system().lower()=="windows" else "clear"
# Action
return subprocess.call(command) == 0
In Windows, the command is cls
, in unix-like systems the command is clear
.
platform.system()
returns the platform name. For example, 'Darwin'
for macOS.
subprocess.call()
performs a system call. For example, subprocess.call(['ls','-l'])
An easier way to clear a screen while in the Python shell is to use Ctrl + L though it works for the shell as well as other programs.
I am using a class that just uses one of the above methods behind the scenes... I noticed it works on Windows and Linux... I like using it though because it's easier to type clear() instead of system('clear') or os.system('clear')
pip3 install clear-screen
from clear_screen import clear
and then when you want to clear the shell:
clear()
If you are using a Linux terminal to access Python, then Ctrl + L is the best solution to clear the screen.
Rather than importing all of curses or shelling out just to get one control character, you can simply use (on Linux/macOS):
print(chr(27) + "[2J")
(Source: Clear terminal in Python)
Using Windows 10 and pyhton3.5, I have tested many codes and nothing helped me more than this:
First define a simple function. This function will print 50 newlines; (the number 50 will depend on how many lines you can see on your screen, so you can change this number)
def cls(): print ("\n" * 50)
Then just call it as many times as you want or need:
cls()
Command + K works fine in OS X to clear the screen.
Shift + Command + K to clear only the scrollback buffer.
Module subprocess allows you to call "cls" for Shell.
import subprocess
cls = subprocess.call('cls', shell=True)
That's as simple as I can make it.
You can use the Windows or Linux OS
import os
os.system('cls')
os.system('clear')
You can use the subprocess module
import subprocess as sp
x = sp.call('cls', shell=True)
For the Python IDLE 3.8.1 you can restart the Shell
CTRL + F6
On the menu Click on the Shell menu. Then click on the Restart Shell option.
Here's how to make your very own cls
or clear
command that will work without explicitly calling any function!
We'll take advantage of the fact that the python console calls repr()
to display objects on screen. This is especially useful if you have your own customized python shell (with the -i
option for example) and you have a pre-loading script for it. This is what you need:
import os
class ScreenCleaner:
def __repr__(self):
os.system('cls') # This actually clears the screen
return '' # Because that's what repr() likes
cls = ScreenCleaner()
Use clear
instead of cls
if you're on Linux (in both the os
command and the variable name)!
Now if you just write cls
or clear
in the console, it will clear it! Not even cls()
or clear()
—just the raw variable. This is because Python will call repr(cls)
to print it out, which will in turn trigger our __repr__
function.
Let's test it out:
>>> df;sag
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
NameError: name 'df' is not defined
>>> sglknas
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
NameError: name 'sglknas' is not defined
>>> lksnldn
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
NameError: name 'lksnldn' is not defined
>>> cls
And the screen is clear!
To clarify, the code above needs to either be imported in the console like this
from somefile import cls
Or preloaded directly with something like:
python -i my_pre_loaded_classes.py
That's the best way:
>>>import os
>>>def cls(): os.system('cls')
>>>cls()
>>>