/python-readchar

Python library to read characters and key strokes

Primary LanguagePython

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Library to easily read single chars and key strokes.

Goal and Philosophy

Born as a python-inquirer requirement.

The idea is to have a portable way to read single characters and key-strokes.

Documentation

Installation

pip install readchar

The readchar library works with python 2.7, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6 and Pypy.

Usage

Usage example:

import readchar

c = readchar.readchar()
key = readchar.readkey()

API

There are just two methods:

readchar()

Reads the next char from stdin, returning it as a string with length 1.

readkey()

Reads the next key-stroke from stdin, returning it as a string.

A key-stroke can have:

  • 1 character for normal keys: 'a', 'z', '9'...
  • 2 characters for combinations with ALT: ALT+A, ...
  • 3 characters for cursors: ->, <-, ...
  • 4 characters for combinations with CTRL and ALT: CTRL+ALT+SUPR, ...

There is a list of previously captured chars with their names in readchar.key, in order to be used in comparisons and so on. This list is not enough tested and it can have mistakes, so use it carefully. Please, report them if found.

OS Support

Sadly, this library has only being probed on GNU/Linux. Please, if you can try it in another OS and find a bug, put an issue or send the pull-request.

Thank you!

How to contribute

You can download the code, make some changes with their tests, and make a pull-request.

In order to develop or running the tests, you can do:

  1. Clone the repository.
git clone https://github.com/magmax/python-readchar.git
  1. Create a virtual environment:
virtualenv venv
  1. Enter in the virtual environment
source venv/bin/activate
  1. Install dependencies
pip install -r requirements-test.txt
  1. Run tests
make

Please, Execute the tests before any pull-request. This will avoid invalid builds.

License

Copyright (c) 2014-2021 Miguel Angel Garcia (@magmax_en).

Based on previous work on gist getch()-like unbuffered character reading from stdin on both Windows and Unix (Python recipe), started by Danny Yoo.

Licensed under the MIT license.