You can also use PyCharm's Python console and use Ctrl + C, if you catch the exception that PyCharm raises when Ctrl + C is pressed. I wrote a short function below called is_keyboard_interrupt
that tells you whether the exception is KeyboardInterrupt, including PyCharm's. If it is not, simply re-raise it. I paste a simplified version of the code below.
When it is run:
- type 'help' and press Enter to repeat the loop.
- type anything else and press Enter to check that ValueError is handled properly.
- Press Ctrl + C to check that KeyboardInterrupt is caught, including in PyCharm's python console.
Note: This doesn't work with PyCharm's debugger console (the one invoked by "Debug" rather than "Run"), but there the need for Ctrl + C is less because you can simply press the pause button.
I also put this on my Gist where I may make updates: https://gist.github.com/yulkang/14da861b271576a9eb1fa0f905351b97
def is_keyboard_interrupt(exception):
# The second condition is necessary for it to work with the stop button
# in PyCharm Python console.
return (type(exception) is KeyboardInterrupt
or type(exception).__name__ == 'KeyboardInterruptException')
try:
def print_help():
print("To exit type exit or Ctrl + c can be used at any time")
print_help()
while True:
task = input("What do you want to do? Type \"help\" for help:- ")
if task == 'help':
print_help()
else:
print("Invalid input.")
# to check that ValueError is handled separately
raise ValueError()
except Exception as ex:
try:
# Catch all exceptions and test if it is KeyboardInterrupt, native or
# PyCharm's.
if not is_keyboard_interrupt(ex):
raise ex
print('KeyboardInterrupt caught as expected.')
print('Exception type: %s' % type(ex).__name__)
exit()
except ValueError:
print('ValueError!')
x = 2
it prints "Doing Stuff" until I press ctrl-c, then it exits. I can't reproduce your problem on linux.SyntaxError: multiple statements found while compiling a single statement