On Jul 13, 4:15 pm, Dave Sampson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > hey folks, > > A simple question hopefully. despite all my searching I have not found a > satisfactory response. > > The goal. Interact with a command line program. Simple enough, but the > key is INTERACT. > > I tried the shell and comand approaches but that initiates, it does not > allow interaction with the programs. > > So then I went with Popen and such... which then led to the subprocess > module. > > I can create the object and read a few lines of output. but if I go too > far then the program hangs. the number of lines will differ depandening > on many function including the format of an input file so I can;t > hardcode how many lines to read. > > I want to read all of STDOUT without failing because I went out of range. > > next I want to read the final line of the output because it tells me > what is required for the next line of input. > > I am supposed to be able to entre 'y' and return for the program to > continue if I agree with what I see in the stdout. > > A problem exists though that I have tried > 'y' > 'y\n' > 'y\r' > > and nothing seems to get the program going again for I still cant; read > past the same point in the standard output. then I have to kill and > start over. > > So the next approach included looking at Pexpect, which got realy > confusing realy fast and despite running fedora core and python 2.4.4 I > would like my application to be cross platform and there is no Pexpect > for Windows That I can see. > > I have checked out many mailing lists and posts and tutorials but they > all admit to not be samples of complex interactivity. I guess I am > having that special case. > > ASPN Python cookbok provided some code for a new Popen Class that allows > for interaction but I don't think I need to go that root.... > > I am essentialy trying to build and Python wrapper for a coomand line > program that i want to build a GUI around. > > Any links or suggestions would be great. Unfortunaetly I don't > understand that abstract concepts in the manual reference. I am fresh in > the python world and find examples better than technical abstracts. > > Cheers
There is something called http://www.rutherfurd.net/python/sendkeys/ send keys for the p.c. you can use a try: except: concept and on the windows platform there is also a way to use autoit in python using pywin. At one time (2001) there was a module that allowed you to use gvim but it has dissapeared unless it is listed somewhere else (gvim doesn't seem to work with the sendkey method and it is a shame it has alot of cool text functions including command line support) http://sourceforge.net/projects/dex-tracker/ -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list