On 24 October 2013 01:09, Tim Daneliuk <tun...@tundraware.com> wrote: > > Now that I think about it, as I recall from the prehistoric era of writing > lots of assembler and C, if you use shell redirection, stdin shows > up as a handle to the file
Yes this is true. A demonstration using seek (on Windows but it is the same in this sense): $ cat test.py import sys sys.stdin.seek(0) print('Seeked fine without errors') $ python test.py Traceback (most recent call last): File "test.py", line 2, in <module> sys.stdin.seek(0) IOError: [Errno 9] Bad file descriptor $ python test.py < other.dat Seeked fine without errors > and there is no way to retrieve/reset it > its default association with the tty/pty. Since python is layered on > top of this, I expect the same would be the case here as well. I think it is true that you cannot restore the association but you can just open the tty explicitly as described here: http://superuser.com/questions/569432/why-can-i-see-password-prompts-through-redirecting-output (I can't test that right now as it obviously doesn't work on Windows). Oscar -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list