I want to print a message with end=''
Sleep for 1 second
Remain on the same line
Erase the previous message using '\b'
Print a new message
Back to step 1
Example:
First output:
1
Second output:
2
Third output:
3
Remains in the same line
NOT: 123
Are you set on using \b? You can use \r to move the cursor back to the beginning of the line, which will let you write over stuff that is already there. If there's a chance that later lines will be shorter than previous ones, you should pad the new lines with whitespace on the right. Something like:
def f(x):
for i in range(1, x+1):
print(end='\r', flush=True)
print('**{}**'.format(i), end='', flush=True)
time.sleep(1)
f(3)
Related
Once again I'm asking for you advice. I'm trying to print a complex string block, it should look like this:
32 1 9999 523
+ 8 - 3801 + 9999 - 49
---- ------ ------ -----
40 -3800 19998 474
I wrote the function arrange_printer() for the characters arrangement in the correct format that could be reutilized for printing the list. This is how my code looks by now:
import operator
import sys
def arithmetic_arranger(problems, boolean: bool):
arranged_problems = []
if len(problems) <= 5:
for num in range(len(problems)):
arranged_problems += arrange_printer(problems[num], boolean)
else:
sys.exit("Error: Too many problems")
return print(*arranged_problems, end=' ')
def arrange_printer(oper: str, boolean: bool):
oper = oper.split()
ops = {"+": operator.add, "-": operator.sub}
a = int(oper[0])
b = int(oper[2])
if len(oper[0]) > len(oper[2]):
size = len(oper[0])
elif len(oper[0]) < len(oper[2]):
size = len(oper[2])
else:
size = len(oper[0])
line = '------'
ope = ' %*i\n%s %*i\n%s' % (size,a,oper[1],size,b,'------'[0:size+2])
try:
res = ops[oper[1]](a,b)
except:
sys.exit("Error: Operator must be '+' or '-'.")
if boolean == True:
ope = '%s\n%*i' % (ope,size+2, res)
return ope
arithmetic_arranger(['20 + 300', '1563 - 465 '], True)
#arrange_printer(' 20 + 334 ', True)
Sadly, I'm getting this format:
2 0
+ 3 0 0
- - - - -
3 2 0 1 5 6 3
- 4 6 5
- - - - - -
1 0 9 8
If you try printing the return of arrange_printer() as in the last commented line the format is the desired.
Any suggestion for improving my code or adopt good coding practices are well received, I'm starting to get a feel for programming in Python.
Thank you by your help!
The first problem I see is that you use += to add an item to the arranged_problems list. Strings are iterable. somelist += someiterable iterates over the someiterable, and appends each element to somelist. To append, use somelist.append()
Now once you fix this, it still won't work like you expect it to, because print() works by printing what you give it at the location of the cursor. Once you're on a new line, you can't go back to a previous line, because your cursor is already on the new line. Anything you print after that will go to the new line at the location of the cursor, so you need to arrange multiple problems such that their first lines all print first, then their second lines, and so on. Just fixing append(), you'd get this output:
20
+ 300
-----
320 1563
- 465
------
1098
You get a string with \n denoting the start of the new line from each call to arrange_printer(). You can split this output into lines, and then process each row separately.
For example:
def arithmetic_arranger(problems, boolean:bool):
arranged_problems = []
if len(problems) > 5:
print("Too many problems")
return
for problem in problems:
# Arrange and split into individual lines
lines = arrange_printer(problem, boolean).split('\n')
# Append the list of lines to our main list
arranged_problems.append(lines)
# Now, arranged_problems contains one list for each problem.
# Each list contains individual lines we want to print
# Use zip() to iterate over all the lists inside arranged_problems simultaneously
for problems_lines in zip(*arranged_problems):
# problems_lines is e.g.
# (' 20', ' 1563')
# ('+ 300', '- 465') etc
# Unpack this tuple and print it, separated by spaces.
print(*problems_lines, sep=" ")
Which gives the output:
20 1563
+ 300 - 465
----- ------
320 1098
If you expect each problem to have a different number of lines, then you can use the itertools.zip_longest() function instead of zip()
To collect all my other comments in one place:
return print(...) is pretty useless. print() doesn't return anything. return print(...) will always cause your function to return None.
Instead of iterating over range(len(problems)) and accessing problems[num], just do for problem in problems and then use problem instead of problems[num]
Debugging is an important skill, and the sooner into your programming career you learn it, the better off you will be.
Stepping through your program with a debugger allows you to see how each statement affects your program and is an invaluable debugging tool
I have an input file.txt like this:
3
2
A
4
7
B
1
9
5
2
0
I'm trying to read the file and
when A is found, print the line that is 2 lines below
when B is found, print the line that is 4 lines below
My current code and current output are like below:
with open('file.txt') as f:
for line in f:
if 'A' in line: ### Skip 2 lines!
f.readline() ### Skipping one line
line = f.readline() ### Locate on the line I want
print(line)
if 'B' in line: ## Skip 4 lines
f.readline() ### Skipping one line
f.readline() ### Skipping two lines
f.readline() ### Skipping three lines
line = f.readline() ### Locate on the line I want
print(line)
'4\n'
7
'1\n'
'9\n'
'5\n'
2
>>>
Is printing the values I want, but is printing also 4\n,1\n... and besides that, I need to write several f.realines()which is not practical.
Is there a better way to do this?
My expected output is like this:
7
2
Here is a much simpler code for you:
lines=open("file.txt","r").read().splitlines()
#print(str(lines))
for i in range(len(lines)):
if 'A' in lines[i]:
print(lines[I+2]) # show 2 lines down
elif 'B' in lines[i]:
print(lines[I+4]) # show 4 lines down
This reads the entire file as an array in which each element is one line of the file. Then it just goes through the array and directly changes the index by 2 (for A) and 4 (for B) whenever it finds the line it is looking for.
if you don't like repeated readline then wrap it in a function so the rest of the code is very clean:
def skip_ahead(it, elems):
assert elems >= 1, "can only skip positive integer number of elements"
for i in range(elems):
value = next(it)
return value
with open('file.txt') as f:
for line in f:
if 'A' in line:
line = skip_ahead(f, 2)
print(line)
if 'B' in line:
line = skip_ahead(f, 4)
print(line)
As for the extra output, when the code you have provided is run in a standard python interpreter only the print statements cause output, so there is no extra lines like '1\n', this is a feature of some contexts like the IPython shell when an expression is found in a statement context, in this case f.readline() is alone on it's own line so it is detected as possibly having a value that might be interesting. to suppress this you can frequently just do _ = <expr> to suppress output.
I have 3 parts in my code. My first part tells me what line number the condition is on for line1. My second part tells me what line number the condition is on for line2. The last part makes the numbers as a range and prints out the range.
The first part of the code: I get a result of 6 for num1.
For the second part of the code I get 24 when i run it by itself but a 18 when i run it with part 1.
Then at the 3rd part i index the file and i try to get the proper lines to print out, but they dont work because my first part of my code is changing numbers when i have both conditions running at the same time.
Is there a better way to run this code with either just indexing or just enumerating? I need to have user input and be able to print out a range of of the file based off the input.
#Python3.7.x
#
#
import linecache
#report=input('Name of the file of Nmap Scan:\n')
#target_ip=input('Which target is the report needed on?:\n')
report = "ScanTest.txt"
target_ip = "10.10.100.2"
begins = "Nmap scan report for"
fhand = open(report,'r')
beginsend = "\n"
#first statement
for num1,line1 in enumerate(fhand, 1):
line1 = line1.rstrip()
if line1.startswith(begins) and line1.endswith(target_ip):
print(num1)
print(line1)
break
#second statement
for num2,line2 in enumerate(fhand, 1):
line2 = line2.rstrip()
if line2.startswith(beginsend) and num2 > num1:
print(num2)
print(line2)
break
with open('ScanTest.txt') as f:
linecount = sum(1 for line in f)
for i in range(num1,num2):
print(linecache.getline("ScanTest.txt", i))
The first part of the code: I get a result of 6 for num1. for the second part of the code I get 24 when i run it by itself but a 18 when i run it with part 1.
Obviously the second part continues reading the file where the first part stopped.
The minimal change is to put
num2 += num1
after the second loop, or just change the 3rd loop to for i in range(num1, num1+num2):. The condition and num2 > num1 within the second loop is to be removed.
I am trying to print over 1 line continuously. In 2.7 I could use print '\r<stuff here>', and that would overwrite the previous line each time. In 3.5+, I've read suggestions like the following: print('\r<stuff here>', end=' ') but this is leaving "dangling" characters when a previous step in the loop is longer.
For example:
for foo in ['55555', '333', '1']:
print('\r', foo, end=' ')
results in
1 3 5
since each line is longer than the next by the ending space.
Suggestions?
Just compute the number of spaces needed to overwrite the longest string and use it as end for print
values = ['55555', '333', '1']
end_spaces = ' '*max(len(x) for x in values)
for foo in values:
print('\r', foo, end=end_spaces)
I'm trying to figure out how to print a one line string while using a for loop. If there are other ways that you know of, I would appreciate the help. Thank you. Also, try edit off my code!
times = int(input("Enter a number: "))
print(times)
a = 0
for i in range(times+1):
print("*"*i)
a += i
print("Total stars: ")
print(a)
print("Equation: ")
for e in range(1,times+1):
print(e)
if e != times:
print("+")
else:
pass
Out:
Enter a number: 5
*
**
***
****
*****
Equation:
1
+
2
+
3
+
4
+
5
How do I make the equation in just one single line like this:
1+2+3+4+5
I don't think you can do a "backspace" after you've printed. At least erasing from the terminal isn't going to be done very easily. But you can build the string before you print it:
times = int(input("Enter a number: "))
print(times)
a = 0
for i in range(times+1):
print("*"*i)
a += i
print("Total stars: ")
print(a)
print("Equation: ")
equation_string = ""
for e in range(1,times+1):
equation_string += str(e)
if e != times:
equation_string += "+"
else:
pass
print(equation_string)
Basically, what happens is you store the temporary equation in equation_str so it's built like this:
1
1+
1+2
1+2+
...
And then you print equation_str once it's completely built. The output of the modified program is this
Enter a number: 5
5
*
**
***
****
*****
Total stars:
15
Equation:
1+2+3+4+5
Feel free to post a comment if anything is unclear.
Instead of your original for loop to print each number, try this:
output = '+'.join([str(i) for i in range(1, times + 1)])
print(output)
Explanation:
[str(i) for i in range(1, times + 1)] is a list comprehension that returns a list of all your numbers, converted to strings so that we can print them.
'+'.join(...) joins each element of your list, with a + in between each element.
Alternatively:
If you want a simple modification to your original code, you can simply suppress the newline from each print statement with the keyword paramater end, and set this to an empty string:
print(e, end='')
(Note that I am addressed the implied question, not the 'how do I do a backspace' question)
Too long for a comment, so I will post here.
The formatting options of python can come into good use, if you have a sequence you wish to format and print.
Consider the following...
>>> num = 5 # number of numbers to generate
>>> n = num-1 # one less used in generating format string
>>> times = [i for i in range(1,num+1)] # generate your numbers
>>> ("{}+"*n + "{}=").format(*times) # format your outputs
'1+2+3+4+5='
So although this doesn't answer your question, you can see that list comprehensions can be brought into play to generate your list of values, which can then be used in the format generation. The format string can also be produced with a l.c. but it gets pretty messy when you want to incorporate string elements like the + and = as shown in the above example.
I think you are looking for the end parameter for the print function - i.e. print(e, end='') which prints each value of e as it arrives followed by no space or newline.