Sweet, thanks for the information. Lots to learn. On Thu, Sep 24, 2009 at 12:23 AM, <exar...@twistedmatrix.com> wrote:
> On 04:11 am, tusklah...@gmail.com wrote: > >> Hello, I'm a newb and have been playing with Python trying to print a >> changing value to the screen that updates as the value changes. I have >> this >> code, which is pretty much doing what I want: >> >> #!/usr/bin/env python3 >> >> import time >> >> text = input('Please enter something: ') >> >> for c in text: >> print('This is what you entered:', '{0}'.format(c), '\033[A') >> if c == text[-1]: >> print('\n') >> time.sleep(1) >> >> >> >> Which will output: "This is what you entered: <text>" with text constantly >> changing. It all stays on the same line, which is what I'm shooting for. >> So >> my question is, the little bit that allows me to do this, the '\033[A', I >> don't really know what that is. I was looking at other code while trying >> to >> figure this out, and '\033[A' was used to do this, but I don't really know >> what it is or where to find information on it. It's an escape code, isn't >> it? But is it in Python, in Bash, or what? Forgive me if my question is >> hazy, I'm just not sure why adding '\033[A' got it working for me, where >> would I find the information that would have enabled me to know that this >> is >> what I needed to use? >> > > Its a vt102 control sequence. It means "move the cursor up one row". vt102 > is something your terminal emulator implements (or, heck, maybe you have a > real physical vt102 terminal.... nah). To Python, it's just a few more > meaningless bytes. > > You can read all about vt102 on vt100.net: > > http://vt100.net/docs/vt102-ug/ > > Jean-Paul >
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