On Sun, Oct 8, 2017 at 10:12 AM, Steve D'Aprano <steve+pyt...@pearwood.info> wrote: > On Sun, 8 Oct 2017 02:06 am, bartc wrote: > >> Especially on >> Windows where the usual Ctrl C doesn't work, so you resort to Ctrl-Break >> will which actually abort it. Ctrl Z is uncommon. > > Thousands of Python programmers on Windows successfully learned to use Ctrl-Z > ENTER back in the days of Python 1.5, before quit/exit were added as a > convenience for beginners, and many of them probably still use it.
Using Ctrl+Z (0x1A) isn't specific to Python. The Windows CRT's text-mode I/O inherits this from MS-DOS, which took it from CP/M. It's obvious in Python 2: >>> open('test.txt', 'w').write('123\x1a456') >>> open('test.txt', 'r').read() '123' >>> open('test.txt', 'rb').read() '123\x1a456' This has been misreported as a bug more than once. Python 3 opens CRT file descriptors in binary mode. Its text mode (TextIOWraper) doesn't implement the legacy Ctrl+Z behavior. However, Ctrl+Z at the start of a line is manually supported in the REPL and raw _WindowsConsoleIO. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list