On Sep 8, 5:37 pm, Thomas Jansson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dear all
>
> I have tkinkter based frontend to a Fortran based program. I use
> subprocess to launch the fortran program as a child process and I wish
> to see the output of the fortran program as it is created in the
> console.
>
> The
Sean DiZazzo wrote:
while aThread.isAlive() or not aQueue.empty():
l = aQueue.get().rstrip()
fo.write(l)
print l
fo.close()
A bit of fun for a sleepless night...
and unless you add a call to time.sleep somewhere in that loop, you'll
keep your CPU up all night as well...
--
http
On Sep 8, 8:37 am, Thomas Jansson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dear all
>
> I have tkinkter based frontend to a Fortran based program. I use
> subprocess to launch the fortran program as a child process and I wish
> to see the output of the fortran program as it is created in the
> console.
>
> The
Dear all
I have tkinkter based frontend to a Fortran based program. I use
subprocess to launch the fortran program as a child process and I wish
to see the output of the fortran program as it is created in the
console.
The fortran program can take up to 20 minuttes to finish and at the
moment the