Issue
Let's say I want to pipe input to a Python program, and then later get input from the user, on the command line.
echo http://example.com/image.jpg | python solve_captcha.py
and the contents of solve_captcha.py
are:
import sys
image_url = sys.stdin.readline()
# Download and open the captcha...
captcha = raw_input("Solve this captcha:")
# do some processing...
The above will trigger a EOFError: EOF when reading a line
error.
I also tried adding a sys.stdin.close()
line, which prompted a ValueError: I/O operation on closed file
.
Can you pipe information to stdin
and then later get input from the user?
Note: This is a stripped down, simplified example - please don't respond by saying "why do you want to do that in the first case," it's really frustrating. I just want to know whether you can pipe information to stdin
and then later prompt the user for input.
Solution
There isn't a general solution to this problem. The best resource seems to be this mailing list thread.
Basically, piping into a program connects the program's stdin
to that pipe, rather than to the terminal.
The mailing list thread has a couple of relatively simple solutions for *nix:
Open /dev/tty to replace sys.stdin:
sys.stdin = open('/dev/tty')
a = raw_input('Prompt: ')
Redirect stdin to another file handle when you run your script, and read from that:
sys.stdin = os.fdopen(3)
a = raw_input('Prompt: ')
$ (echo -n test | ./x.py) 3<&0
as well as the suggestion to use curses. Note that the mailing list thread is ancient so you may need to modify the solution you pick.
Answered By - agf Answer Checked By - Terry (WPSolving Volunteer)