I want to know if it's possible to catch a Control-C in python in the following manner:
if input != contr-c:
#DO THINGS
else:
#quit
I've read up on stuff with try
and except KeyboardInterrupt
but they're not working for me.
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I want to know if it's possible to catch a Control-C in python in the following manner:
if input != contr-c:
#DO THINGS
else:
#quit
I've read up on stuff with try
and except KeyboardInterrupt
but they're not working for me.
Consider reading this page about handling exceptions.. It should help.
As @abarnert has said, do sys.exit()
after except KeyboardInterrupt:
.
Something like
try:
# DO THINGS
except KeyboardInterrupt:
# quit
sys.exit()
You can also use the built in exit()
function, but as @eryksun pointed out, sys.exit
is more reliable.
site.exit
(builtins exit) won't be defined if Python is started with -S
. That isn't common, but still, sys.exit
is more dependable. You can also use raise SystemExit([exit_code=0])
.
– Eryk Sun
Mar 10 '13 at 9:04
From your comments, it sounds like your only problem with except KeyboardInterrupt:
is that you don't know how to make it exit when you get that interrupt.
If so, that's simple:
import sys
try:
user_input = input()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
sys.exit(0)
KeyboardInterrupt
but instead of just exiting, Python does the operations intry
, which is not what I want. – pauliwago Mar 10 '13 at 2:25input
/stdin.read
/etc., a platform-specificgetch
(if so, which?),curses
, or …? It's generally possible in every case, but the answers are very different between the cases. – abarnert Mar 10 '13 at 2:36try
"? Normally, when you handle an exception, Python does the operations in theexcept
block. If you want it to quit, you can just, e.g., callsys.exit()
in thatexcept
block. – abarnert Mar 10 '13 at 2:37