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Overwriting/clearing previous console line

My problem is, that I want to be able to overwrite/clear previous printed line in python console. This question has been asked many times (Python - Remove and Replace Printed items for example), however with the very same code that is (the answer marked as correct, for me prints out nothing at all):

for i in range(10):
    print("Loading" + "." * i)
    time.sleep(1)
    sys.stdout.write("\033[F") # Cursor up one line
    sys.stdout.write("\033[K") # Clear to the end of line

I get the output (In python IDLE) :

Loading
[F[KLoading.
[F[KLoading..
[F[KLoading...
[F[KLoading....
[F[KLoading.....
[F[KLoading......
[F[KLoading.......
[F[KLoading........
[F[KLoading.........
[F[KLoading..........
[F[K

Any ideas? I googled a lot, nothing works really. It either prints out nothing or just does not overwrite.

If that helps, I am running windows 8.1 and Python 3.51. Running the code trough cmd doesn't affect anything.

Also, adding sys.stdout.flush() does not help.

like image 459
czyngis Avatar asked Apr 09 '16 17:04

czyngis


People also ask

How do you overwrite a previous line in Python?

Summary: The most straightforward way to overwrite the previous print to stdout is to set the carriage return ( '\r' ) character within the print statement as print(string, end = "\r") . This returns the next stdout line to the beginning of the line without proceeding to the next line.

What does end \r do?

Put the \r at the beginning or end of your printed string, e.g. '\rthis string will start at the beginning of the line' . or 'the next string will start at the beginning of the line\r' . Conceptually, \r moves the cursor to the beginning of the line and then keeps outputting characters as normal.


2 Answers

You need to run your program form the command line, not from within IDLE.

Then, this should work:

import sys
import time

for i in range(10):
    sys.stdout.write("\r" + "Loading" + "." * i)
    time.sleep(1)
    sys.stdout.flush()
print()

The \r goes to beginning of the line. So you have to make sure the string you print is at least as long as the one before. Otherwise, you will see parts of the previous print.

like image 66
Mike Müller Avatar answered Oct 15 '22 00:10

Mike Müller


You're trying to use ANSI escape sequences to move the cursor. Windows doesn't support those by default. To enable them, you could install the colorama module with pip install colorama in your terminal, then in Python:

import colorama
colorama.init()

If you've upgraded to Windows 10, you can enable support with this instead:

import ctypes
kernel32 = ctypes.windll.kernel32
kernel32.SetConsoleMode(kernel32.GetStdHandle(-11), 7)

(Source: https://stackoverflow.com/a/36760881/6379747)

like image 43
ForgottenUmbrella Avatar answered Oct 14 '22 22:10

ForgottenUmbrella