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@jasonrdsouza
Created February 24, 2012 15:54
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Python function to get keypresses from the terminal
def getchar():
#Returns a single character from standard input
import tty, termios, sys
fd = sys.stdin.fileno()
old_settings = termios.tcgetattr(fd)
try:
tty.setraw(sys.stdin.fileno())
ch = sys.stdin.read(1)
finally:
termios.tcsetattr(fd, termios.TCSADRAIN, old_settings)
return ch
while 1:
ch = getchar()
print 'You pressed', ch
@oname-15h
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Good code. The only problem is that it traps everything - including control-Z, control-C, and anything else a user might invoke to force an interrupt signal.

if you use
tty.setcbreak() instead of tty.setraw()
linux will catch the control characters(like ctrl+c) but will still pass through keystrokes

@daver1691
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daver1691 commented Jun 22, 2022

@oname-15h, I find that KeyboardInterrupt at tty.setcbreak() crashes the BASH shell for some reason.

If tty.setraw() is used as before, then its capturing of all control characters makes the "try" block redundant, but if we want a way to return to the shell from within the getchar() routine, then we can test for ordinal values of the control codes and call sys.exit() if found.

def getchar():
    import tty, termios, sys
    fd = sys.stdin.fileno()
    old_settings = termios.tcgetattr(fd)
    tty.setraw(sys.stdin.fileno())
    ch = sys.stdin.read(1)
    termios.tcsetattr(fd, termios.TCSADRAIN, old_settings)
    # Exit on ctrl-c, ctrl-d, ctrl-z, or ESC
    if ord(ch) in [3, 4, 26, 27]:
        sys.exit()
    return ch

@Vosjedev
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Vosjedev commented Mar 2, 2023

The best solution on the internet so far, good job.
@jasonrdsouza Could i use this in a public script?
Thanks!

@jerwinnnnn1212
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ty

@Lampe2020
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Wouldn't it be better to move the imports outside the function body? That way the modules don't get imported every time the function is run but instead just once and then reused for every call to the function.

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