I want to create a Python program which takes in multiple lines of user input. For example:
This is a multilined input.
It has multiple sentences.
Each sentence is on a newline.
How can I take in multiple lines of raw input?
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I want to create a Python program which takes in multiple lines of user input. For example:
This is a multilined input.
It has multiple sentences.
Each sentence is on a newline.
How can I take in multiple lines of raw input?
sentinel = '' # ends when this string is seen
for line in iter(raw_input, sentinel):
pass # do things here
To get every line as a string you can do:
'\n'.join(iter(raw_input, sentinel))
Python 3:
'\n'.join(iter(input, sentinel))
iter()
. You sir are a bl--dy genius!
– inspectorG4dget
Oct 12 '13 at 7:40
iter(lambda: raw_input('prompt'), sentinel)
– jamylak
Dec 21 '14 at 10:55
Alternatively, you can try sys.stdin.read()
that returns the whole input until EOF
:
import sys
s = sys.stdin.read()
print(s)
Keep reading lines until the user enters an empty line (or change stopword
to something else)
text = ""
stopword = ""
while True:
line = raw_input()
if line.strip() == stopword:
break
text += "%s\n" % line
print text
Just extending this answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/11664652/4476612 instead of any stop word you can just check whether a line is there or not
content = []
while True:
line = raw_input()
if line:
content.append(line)
else:
break
you will get the lines in a list and then join with \n to get in your format.
print '\n'.join(content)
*I struggled with this question myself for such a long time, because I wanted to find a way to read multiple lines of user input without the user having to terminate it with Control D (or a stop word). In the end i found a way in Python3, using the pyperclip module (which you'll have to install using pip install) Following is an example that takes a list of IPs *
import pyperclip
lines = 0
while True:
lines = lines + 1 #counts iterations of the while loop.
text = pyperclip.paste()
linecount = text.count('\n')+1 #counts lines in clipboard content.
if lines <= linecount: # aslong as the while loop hasn't iterated as many times as there are lines in the clipboard.
ipaddress = input()
print(ipaddress)
else:
break
For me this does exactly what I was looking for; take multiple lines of input, do the actions that are needed (here a simple print) and then break the loop when the last line was handled. Hope it can be equally helpful to you too.
Try this
import sys
lines = sys.stdin.read().splitlines()
print(lines)
INPUT:
1
2
3
4
OUTPUT: ['1', '2', '3', '4']
The easiest way to read multiple lines from a prompt/console when you know exact number of lines you want your python to read, is list comprehension.
lists = [ input() for i in range(2)]
The code above reads 2 lines. And save inputs in a list.
sys.stdin.read() can be used to take multiline input from user. For example
>>> import sys
>>> data = sys.stdin.read()
line one
line two
line three
<<Ctrl+d>>
>>> for line in data.split(sep='\n'):
print(line)
o/p:line one
line two
line three
Its the best way for writing the code in python >3.5 version
a= int(input())
if a:
list1.append(a)
else:
break
even if you want to put a limit for the number of values you can go like
while s>0:
a= int(input())
if a:
list1.append(a)
else:
break
s=s-1
A more cleaner way (without stop word hack or CTRL+D) is to use Python Prompt Toolkit
We can then do:
from prompt_toolkit import prompt
if __name__ == '__main__':
answer = prompt('Paste your huge long input: ')
print('You said: %s' % answer)
It input handling is pretty efficient even with long multiline inputs.
raw_input
solutions or would you be fine with taking the input directly fromstdin
? – jamylak Jul 26 '12 at 7:54