6

I would like to detect whether there is input on stdin in a short time window, and continue execution either way, with the outcome stored in a Bool. (My real goal is to implement a pause button on a simulation that runs in the terminal. A second keypress should unpause the program, and it should continue executing.) I have tried to use poll_fd but it does not work on stdin:

julia> FileWatching.poll_fd(stdin, readable=true)
ERROR: MethodError: no method matching poll_fd(::Base.TTY; readable=true)

Is there a way that will work on julia? I have found a solution that works in python, and I have considered using this via PyCall, but I am looking for

  1. a cleaner, pure-julia way; and
  2. a way that does not fight or potentially interfere with julia's use of libuv.

2 Answers 2

7
bytesavailable(stdin)

Here is a sample usage. Note that if you capture the keyboard you also need to handle Ctrl+C yourself (in this example only the first byte of chunk is checked).

If you want to run it fully asynchronously put @async in front of the while loop. However if there will be no more code in this case this program will just exit.

import REPL
term = REPL.Terminals.TTYTerminal("xterm",stdin,stdout,stderr)
REPL.Terminals.raw!(term,true)
Base.start_reading(stdin)

while (true)
    sleep(1)
    bb = bytesavailable(stdin)
    if bb > 0
        data = read(stdin, bb)
        if data[1] == UInt(3)
            println("Ctrl+C - exiting")
            exit()
        end
        println("Got $bb bytes: $(string(data))")
    end
end
Sign up to request clarification or add additional context in comments.

4 Comments

bytesavailable(stdin) returns 0 even after multiple keys have been pressed. I'm trying to figure out now if there is a way to disable libuv's input buffer.
Thanks. bytesavailable(stdin) now returns the number of bytes available. But this came at a cost of Ctrl+C no longer interrupting the process. Also, I am trying to figure out how to read/clear synchronously once bytes are available (read(stdin) did not work).
I wrote the full code for you and updated the answer but if you want to add another functionality please ask a separate question on StackOverflow
With julia 1.5 now out, I believe the Ctrl+C interrupt can now be enabled more succinctly by using Base.exit_on_sigint github.com/JuliaLang/julia/pull/29411/files
0

Following @Przemyslaw Szufel's response, here is a full solution that allows a keypress to pause/unpause the iteration of a loop:

import REPL
term = REPL.Terminals.TTYTerminal("xterm",stdin,stdout,stderr)
REPL.Terminals.raw!(term,true)
Base.start_reading(stdin)

function read_and_handle_control_c()
    b = bytesavailable(stdin)
    @assert b > 0
    data = read(stdin, b)
    if data[1] == UInt(3)
        println("Ctrl+C - exiting")
        exit()
    end
    nothing
end

function check_for_and_handle_pause()
    if bytesavailable(stdin) > 0
        read_and_handle_control_c()
        while bytesavailable(stdin) == 0
            sleep(0.1)
        end
        read_and_handle_control_c()
    end
    nothing
end

while true
    # [do stuff]
    sleep(0.05)
    check_for_and_handle_pause()
end

This is somewhat suboptimal in that it requires the process to wake up regularly even when paused, but it achieves my goal nevertheless.

Comments

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Start asking to get answers

Find the answer to your question by asking.

Ask question

Explore related questions

See similar questions with these tags.